Hi all, I recently took a plunge down the slope and got a set of blue spruce paring chisels and today I got around to flattening the backs. After refreshing my memory with a couple of youtube videos from lie nielsen and rob cosman I set to work with lapping film on float glass but the results were much less than my expectations. Even on the coarsest grade of 40 microns I achieved patchy results with all but the smallest chisels showing a polish in the centre and a good couple of mms missed around the edges. Having achieved reasonable results on a set of ashley iles in the past I was surprised that the blue spruces didn't succumb in the same way. I'm pretty sure that the film is flat with no air bubbles and I tried to apply pressure evenly and not rock the chisel as I moved it. I spent close to an hour on the 1/2 inch size and didn't end up with an even polish. I'm thinking that 40 microns just isn't coarse enough but I've scoured the internet for a coarser grade and the next size seems to be 100 - is this too coarse? I have a diamond stone with a 1000 grit side too, would that be finer than 100 micron film and suitable for the first stage? Thanks in advance for any ideas.