Phil Pascoe
Established Member
http://www.axminster.co.uk/india-oilstone-ax822726
Ours are a little more expensive than yours.
I don't know I'd ruin a diamond on one though.
Ours are a little more expensive than yours.
CStanford":1eyibb01 said:I guess these have to be imported then. Nobody in the UK making stones? I never imagined that. Sounds like a business opportunity.
bugbear":31s8gcbg said:CStanford":31s8gcbg said:I guess these have to be imported then. Nobody in the UK making stones? I never imagined that. Sounds like a business opportunity.
There are many differences between the UK and the USA Charlie Boy. It's one of the reasons we bother having a UK forum. :lol:
BugBear
Old used stones are always hollow (or at least, not perfectly flat), just as old chisels/plane irons always have rounded bevels. That's how it was done, with no problems.phil.p":3vhj04ek said:There's someone who agrees with Jacob in my area - I found a boxed stone this morning at the market that was over 1/2" hollow. :shock:
Charles, I don't use oilstones only waterstones but as my mother used to say when getting me to hoover or do the ironing as a child - pay attention to the edges and the corners and the middle will get done. It's years since I flattened one.
Jacob":2un2ao4l said:Old used stones are always hollow (or at least, not perfectly flat), just as old chisels/plane irons always have rounded bevels. That's how it was done, with no problems.
Nobody bothered with flattening until the new sharpening came along to make things difficult - the main motivation being the opportunity to sell loads of kit, DVDs , courses, articles.
As you say; "pay attention to the edges and the corners and the middle will get done".
ED65":115jx0cf said:Well this is going to cause the vein in someone's forehead to start throbbing but I've gone to the trouble of flattening an SiC stone that cost me nothing at all. It was heavily dished on both sides when it came to me and required substantial effort to sort out. Why bother? Well I was brought up not to waste perfectly good stuff if some elbow grease and a bit of time would sort it out.
If your priorities are different that's fine, but please don't pontificate to us who have a different set.
I would however be in favour of spreading the notion that you don't need to spend much to do this kind of thing. The first few times I flattened stones I used a concrete block and I've read numerous posts from guys who use the pavement outside their house.
Sheffield Tony":1f5xyizj said:I heard this tip about using concrete blocks, paving etc to flatten a stone. I tried it out on a Norton India oilstone I have which was dished in both directions, by rubbing it on a hard concrete paving slab. No discernable impact on the stone within the sort of timescale I'm willing to spend. Instead I made some improvement with judicious use of a carborundum wheel dressing stick, like this one. But only after a soak in paraffin, to avoid the stick getting gummed up with the oil.