gidon
Established Member
Thanks Olly - does the trick . Do generally use a honing guide - can't dish diamond stones plus move the blade around and flip it end to end every now and again.
Roger - the (David Charlesworth's) ruler trick uses a thin 6" ruler placed close to the edge of the stone when polishing the back of plane blades. Ensures the important bit right behind the blade is polished. See my other video - sharpening using waterstones if you like - I use it at the end.
Thanks Tony. Yes 8" Duosharp stones - my first one was extra coarse / fine and my second stone is coarse / fine. Both bought in the states cheaply . That one on Ebay is the 10" one - guess this chap has bought a few back from the states too!
Your Arkansas stone may well be finer than the extra fine diamond stone - Arkansas stones have quite a range - what sort is it? Have a look here for grits of common stones.
I like the Duosharps - hard to know for sure if it's marketing hype but the (patented ) polka dots are meant to capture some of the slurry which means quicker cutting and less wiping of the stones. Having just got a Diasharp too I would tend to concur but know others wouldn't - at the time they were the only double sided ones available guaranteed to be very flat - that was the reason I got them wasn't too fussed on the polka dots. Paul is right though - only pull very narrow tools towards you on it.
Cheers
Gidon
Roger - the (David Charlesworth's) ruler trick uses a thin 6" ruler placed close to the edge of the stone when polishing the back of plane blades. Ensures the important bit right behind the blade is polished. See my other video - sharpening using waterstones if you like - I use it at the end.
Thanks Tony. Yes 8" Duosharp stones - my first one was extra coarse / fine and my second stone is coarse / fine. Both bought in the states cheaply . That one on Ebay is the 10" one - guess this chap has bought a few back from the states too!
Your Arkansas stone may well be finer than the extra fine diamond stone - Arkansas stones have quite a range - what sort is it? Have a look here for grits of common stones.
I like the Duosharps - hard to know for sure if it's marketing hype but the (patented ) polka dots are meant to capture some of the slurry which means quicker cutting and less wiping of the stones. Having just got a Diasharp too I would tend to concur but know others wouldn't - at the time they were the only double sided ones available guaranteed to be very flat - that was the reason I got them wasn't too fussed on the polka dots. Paul is right though - only pull very narrow tools towards you on it.
Cheers
Gidon