Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Strewth! I'm horrified by the complexity of modern sharpening and the way that beginners have been drawn in.Washy21":30o5xtfv said:Hi
I have attached a picture of the stone.
What was I doing? Here was my obviously destructive sharpening process:
- Soak the stone for about 5-10 minutes
Use the Ice Bear holder
Use the course side for lapping the back of chisels and plane iron
Use Veritas honing guide on course stone to obtain edge
Every few minutes mark the stones with pencil and flatten with the DMT block
Use plenty of water throughout
Use all of the stone for lapping (obviously I haven't)
The DMT was about £60 so it wasn't one of the cheap ones. It is very new as were the stones (about one week old).
So is it the case that I have forgotten to flatten the stones correctly: mistaking believing that erasing the pencil marks achieves flatness?
Again, it's not the end of the world if I have to buy another and any lessons learned are valuable.
If you have DMT diamond why are you bothering with waterstones? Use the diamond for sharpening. NB Ezelap are just as good but much cheaper.
Flattening every few minutes? I've never flattened a stone in 50 years. (Well I did once but it was a mistake). Alter your technique to use the whole surface and you won't need to flatten.
Lapping surfaces? Don't bother, it's just one of the new rituals - completely unecessary.
Waterstones? Difficult, messy, short lived, pointless. Oil stones last for life. Diamond last a long time and are the fastest and easiest to use.
Honing guide? Expensive. Unnecessary. Primary cause of problems, particularly the need to flatten stones - they don't work on non flat stones hence the obsession with plate glass, granite slabs etc, all brought in to correct the deficiencies of honing guides