Don't fret. It's shocking how readily people will check their common sense at the door when they want to believe something, or like the person delivering the message. There, I just summed up the marketing profession for you in one sentence.
Each blade sold with its own stone? And each pair must have its own formula of snake oil perhaps? Could be money in this - Honerite is already one of the most expensive fluids known to man* but that could be just the beginning!bugbear":1xzbbkyh said:....
Yes - the steel and stone must form a "pair". ....
Jacob":16giht7j said:Each blade sold with its own stone? And each pair must have its own formula of snake oil perhaps? Could be money in this - Honerite is already one of the most expensive fluids known to man* but that could be just the beginning!bugbear":16giht7j said:....
Yes - the steel and stone must form a "pair". ....
*slight exaggeration - it's only £60+ per litre as compared to about £5 for wd40 (very similar stuff) or £20+ for scotch whisky (does the job and tastes nicer) - there's a sucker born every minute!
Jacob":h6948ihr said:Each blade sold with its own stone? And each pair must have its own formula of snake oil perhaps? Could be money in this - Honerite is already one of the most expensive fluids known to man* but that could be just the beginning!bugbear":h6948ihr said:....
Yes - the steel and stone must form a "pair". ....
*slight exaggeration - it's only £60+ per litre as compared to about £5 for wd40 (very similar stuff) or £20+ for scotch whisky (does the job and tastes nicer) - there's a sucker born every minute!
One inference that you can draw from that is that you could produce of table of steel types vs. stone types with crosses showing which worked with which. If it appeared that having three different kinds of steels meant that you needed three different kinds of stones, it would probably concentrate minds a bit and make people choose different steels which could all be sharpened on the same stones or restrict themselves to one or two steel types.bugbear":3qlpjg7n said:Corneel":3qlpjg7n said:And I think David is on to something too. Important is to match the steel with the sharpening medium. And because oilstones have some very favorable properties in the workshop (not much mess, hard surface so no flattening neccessary and no digging of small tools into the surface, and they can always easilly be revived to cut as well as new, unlike diamond stones or sandpaper), it is very understandable that the workers of old prefered toolsteels that work well together with these oilstones.
Yes - the steel and stone must form a "pair". In traditional Japan they have different steels [to the UK] and different stones, which, again, work well as a pair.
You cannot extract an item from its context without consequences.
BugBear
CStanford":xz9vf367 said:And so when you hear that some new steel sharpens just as rapidly as some other steel but outlasts it by a factor of three, or other similarly spectacular puffery, you know that you are at best being marketed to or at worst being lied to.
CStanford":xz9vf367 said:Yet, intelligent people believe it. It doesn't take craft skills on the order of Alan Peters to realize that the whole proposition is as Jacob put it, "logically extremely improbable."
CStanford":3cwvrc3s said:That's a reasonable strategy in any age. It's not significant commentary on anything other than a workshop practice, for instance spending the first fifteen to thirty minutes of the day making sure the tools one expect's to use that day are sharp.
CStanford":1puqyjss said:You and I think a lot alike and that should scare the hell out of you.
D_W":ycjfhgts said:CStanford":ycjfhgts said:You and I think a lot alike and that should scare the hell out of you.
I'm going to get a used straitjacket and see how it feels. Maybe sleep in it a day or two .... must be the direction I'm going!
If I develop a taste for danish modern and literary references, I'll know i'm done for.
woodbrains":1srwrh6n said:Hello,
So this is my take on things. I can sharpen any tool I need to to a very high degree and reasonably quickly. Fast enough for how I wish to work. So, I have a normal (whatever that means) carbon steel iron, that after grinding, takes 5 or 6 strokes of an 8000G water stone to produce a wire edge and a couple more on the back to remove it. I'm having a bad day and some ornery wood is requiring me to rehone after 10 minutes of planing. Now I also have a special alloy iron that is purported to last 3 times longer. Using the logic that a tool that will resist abrasion 3 times longer, it will take 3 times longer to hone (in ideal circumstances, how else could this be) then I will have to hone this iron 15 to 18 strokes on the stone and can plane for 30 minutes. So tell me that the second scenario is not advantageous and is not a logical course to take.
Mike.
Edit, to put it another way, invest 5-6 seconds honing for 10 minutes planing versus 15-18 seconds honing for 30 minutes. I think tis is what our American friends call a no brainier. ( this does not account for removal and reinsertion of the iron into the plane, which will be 3 to 1 for the carbon steel iron if 30 minutes planing time was accomplished there)
Would an artist be happy with pencils only sharpenable at dawn?D_W":3sri8dgf said:CStanford":3sri8dgf said:That's a reasonable strategy in any age. It's not significant commentary on anything other than a workshop practice, for instance spending the first fifteen to thirty minutes of the day making sure the tools one expect's to use that day are sharp.
That makes more sense now -desiring to set sharpening aside as something to be done outside of the work cycle.
woodbrains":3p077mgn said:Hello,
I like your thinking, but no! All things equal here, so no loss either way.
The big advantage is time planing versus time sharpening, so, on a good day when wood is behaving, 20 mins with the carbon steel will equate to an hour with the fancy alloy, but still for the same investment in honing times. The advantage increases, in fact, with easier woods.
Mike.
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