you really never have to refresh the surface. im guessing that's the secret. a clogged stone and thick oil gives a finer hone!
clogging on oilstones probably happens three ways:
1) swarf from the stone (crystolon stones do this with light oil - they need a lot of oil and a bath is better. with an oil bath, there isn't another hand grinding stone that comes remotely close, not even diamonds, regardless of how tough the steel is).
2) pinning (wire edge can come off on india stones, especially with stainless and A2, etc (v11 is stainless) - or just with soft steel) can end up on the surface and pinning mutilates edges
3) drying oil
1 and 3 solve themselves with the introduction of more oil (as long as a drying oil that shouldn't be used isn't
too too old and dry (simple green soak usually loosens that stuff, but you can just grind it off, too).
2 needs something that grabs the pinning more than the stone, or abraded off
I never refresh an india stone, but will wire brush pinning off.
pinning looks like no big deal, you may feel it, etc. It's destroying an edge when a little point of metal sticks in the stone and nobody hones as much off as the pinning creates (it can easily create nicks 2 or 3 thousandths deep, meaning at least that much of the edge has to be removed to get a fresh edge, and it would take half an hour to hone that much off with most finish oilstones).
Hopefully this doesn't get too complicated to the starter of this thread. Freehand and oilstones is my mode of choice, period, and I've had at least 300 sharpening stones and have played with everything. I've had two wet grinders (both gone) have three wheel grinders right now and two belt grinders, and right above my sharpening station is a stone that cost $700. I prefer a simple hard middle stone and something cheap for finishing ,and a buffer is good to have once you get down sharpening to an apex.
I don't agree with jacob on the rounded bevel and if he were in the states, I'd show his edges under a scope to show why. He'll spend more sharpening time than I do and get a worse edge. It's OK if you're not finishing things with tools, but it's an easy issue to solve, biasing the process to create an edge that most people will never experience in about 30 seconds. For me, It's washita and then buffer, or on harder steels, india/washita/buffer. The really expensive stones are fun to figure out how to get the most out of and they can have interesting feels, but the work-a-day stones you can just use and beat on and do whatever you want and never feel like you have to be precious (and they're fast).