transatlantic":23plt18h said:
If you have a very small secondary bevel (~1mm), is there really any need to work up the grits? Can't you just always go back to the highest stone? that is of course until the secondary bevel gets too large.
Honing is not like sanding, so yes absolutely. Large, gigantic even, steps in grit
are perfectly viable, and not just when honing a secondary. I go from 150 diamond straight to 1,000 grit plate doing a single continuous bevel (on everything MikeG), without any problems erasing the 150-grit scratches.
I've mentioned in a past thread that Paul Sellers specifically said, in response to a viewer question, that one should always go through the progression of grits when honing. While there's nothing theoretically wrong with this, other than wasting a little steel (frankly too little to be of concern), it does have some other issues for the less-experienced sharpener.
And the main thing is that it's perfectly viable to do all day-to-day honing of a similar style of convex bevel, or a flat bevel, starting on a 1,000 plate (this is not to say the same is true of other 1,000# abrasives).
The above plus stropping is all I've done for years now, except for occasional forays into this and that picked up at car boot sales just to try out, virtually all of which I've found offer nothing useful to me. The one and only purchase that I find in any way useful for routine honing is a slate hone, and I've had three and only one of them works quite as I like so the material varies that much.