sniks7
Established Member
I met a chap from this forum, and as happens when discussing precision American planes and hand tools that are way too beautifully made to get any where near a workshop, the discussion ended up with us bemoaning the difficulty of sharpening expensive Japanese damascus steel knives (some of which are way too beautifully made to go anywhere near food and so shouldn't be blunt in any case..).
I went home, hacked some 2mm wide chunks of lemon into a stiff gin and got on with my life.
However, after 20 years, I've finally managed to get a worthwhile edge on a Kai Sanguto: just about good enough to shave with.
As part of the process (medium grit, fine grit, leather strop with polish) a little light went 'bing' and I thought "why not try out autosol on the strop?".
But I didn't have any Autosol because my bike is largely made out of plastic. So I used Autoglym Paint renovator. Which seems to have given the blade a lovely polish and means I can now drop paper thin slices of lemon into my six o'clock sharpener.
And I then thought, as I buffed the blade up with a chamois, using Autosol might be an interesting way of polishing up hand tools, which would give me something other than firewood to contribute to this forum.
QED
I went home, hacked some 2mm wide chunks of lemon into a stiff gin and got on with my life.
However, after 20 years, I've finally managed to get a worthwhile edge on a Kai Sanguto: just about good enough to shave with.
As part of the process (medium grit, fine grit, leather strop with polish) a little light went 'bing' and I thought "why not try out autosol on the strop?".
But I didn't have any Autosol because my bike is largely made out of plastic. So I used Autoglym Paint renovator. Which seems to have given the blade a lovely polish and means I can now drop paper thin slices of lemon into my six o'clock sharpener.
And I then thought, as I buffed the blade up with a chamois, using Autosol might be an interesting way of polishing up hand tools, which would give me something other than firewood to contribute to this forum.
QED