Dovetaildave
Established Member
I've just bumped into this article By Brian Green and found it very informative.
Being the owner of various sharpening mediums over 25 Years, I have found I generally go with Diamond plates and polish with either; worn diamond or King waterstone, wet n dry or leather strop and 25 year old autosol from my biking days.
In recent years I have accumulated some different steels including O1, A2, laminated smoothcut, etc
I found it interesting that the writer was confident to suggest a brand/medium to move to if you were using particular brand/medium, and a consideration to the steels being sharpened
I don't know if I'm allowed to cut n paste the entire article here, but I imagine I can include a little snip maybe....
"One micron = one-millionth of a metre. The symbol is ‘μ’. A typical human hair is approximately 40μ.
When converted to microns, it becomes apparent that particle size can vary greatly between brands. Recent testing reveals that not all 1,000 grit stones – or 4000, or 8,000 – are the same."
"As an illustration, a comparison of fine waterstones indicates these anomalies in our previous assumptions:
• Norton 8,000 stone is rated 3μ
• King 8,000 is 2.5μ
• Sigma 10,000 is 1.5μ
• Imanishi 8,000 is 1.2μ"
There's a lots to read and take-in in the two page article, I'm sure I will return to if for reference in the future years.
Thanks for this Brian =D>
Being the owner of various sharpening mediums over 25 Years, I have found I generally go with Diamond plates and polish with either; worn diamond or King waterstone, wet n dry or leather strop and 25 year old autosol from my biking days.
In recent years I have accumulated some different steels including O1, A2, laminated smoothcut, etc
I found it interesting that the writer was confident to suggest a brand/medium to move to if you were using particular brand/medium, and a consideration to the steels being sharpened
I don't know if I'm allowed to cut n paste the entire article here, but I imagine I can include a little snip maybe....
"One micron = one-millionth of a metre. The symbol is ‘μ’. A typical human hair is approximately 40μ.
When converted to microns, it becomes apparent that particle size can vary greatly between brands. Recent testing reveals that not all 1,000 grit stones – or 4000, or 8,000 – are the same."
"As an illustration, a comparison of fine waterstones indicates these anomalies in our previous assumptions:
• Norton 8,000 stone is rated 3μ
• King 8,000 is 2.5μ
• Sigma 10,000 is 1.5μ
• Imanishi 8,000 is 1.2μ"
There's a lots to read and take-in in the two page article, I'm sure I will return to if for reference in the future years.
Thanks for this Brian =D>