Steve Voigt
New member
Jacob":30jg8oiu said: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".
This is simply not correct. The original text of "The Joiner and Cabinetmaker" (1839) refers to workmen being fined for not flattening their stones. Charles Hayward, who learned his craft 100 years ago, warns strenuously about the dangers of not flattening stones, and gives a method (builders sand on a flagstone) that is not that different from what Stewie is doing.
Flatness is not the only consideration: dressed stones cut much more rapidly. I'd rather not be at the sharpening station all day.
Regarding your earlier comment that flattening "severely shortens the life of a stone," I must say that I flatten my stones every week or two, but I expect I will be dead before my stones are too thin to use.
A couple other comments on this thread. Charlie referred to spending $300 to flatten a $20 stone. No doubt using the DMT on a Crystolon was pretty boneheaded, but it doesn't have to be that way. I bought 2 pounds (probably a lifetime supply) of 60-80 grit SiC for about $15, shipping included. I went to the local glass place to buy a remnant and they gave me one for free. So, you can spend less than $20. Amortized over hundreds or even thousands of flattenings, that works out to pennies per session.
Also, I have to agree with Ed's "If your priorities are different that's fine, but please don't pontificate to us who have a different set." For example, part of my living involves preparing irons and shipping them to others. I need to be able to tell someone honestly that I flattened the back on a flat stone. If they want to use a hollowed stone, that's fine, but I need to have some kind of consistent reference or starting point.
Last, while I obviously believe in flattening stones, I think I wouldn't have done so here. I don't have personal experience with Crystolon stones, but I know they are very hard and consequently difficult to flatten. At $20 per pop, I'd treat the stone as disposable, and just get a new one every few years. On the other hand, India and Arkansas stones are very easy to flatten.