ED65":oy7ugd8h said:
Cheshirechappie":oy7ugd8h said:
The India stone can slurp up a bit of oil, and also tends to do most of the sharpening work (the natural Arks would be a bit more frugal, being impermeable). My polishing stone (an Inigo Jones slate hone) barely uses any at all. I find that the slate just needs a wipe at the end of a workshop day, but the India needs lifting, wiping all over, and mopping up of the oil that's seeped through and leaked out of it's bottom.
Did you buy your India new or was it a car boot purchase? This doesn't sound like the behaviour of a stock India. I wonder if the previous owner soaked out the stone, or perhaps you cleaned it a little
too thoroughly if it was black and filthy when you got it, like they all seem to be secondhand!
It was bought new, along with an Emir box for it, back when I first started home woodworking in the mid 1980s. After a few years of use (maybe two or three) I noticed that the drawer in which the boxed stone was kept had developed a oily stain, and examination showed the oilstone box to be saturated with oil. At the time, I used 3-in-1 on it, but wiped it clean after use.
Speculating a bit with the benefit of hindsight, it could be that the residual 3-in-1 in the pores of the stone were acting as a solvent on the oil fill, eventually removing most or all of it, to soak through the wood of the box (beechwood, by the way) and the drawer bottom. Also with the benefit of hindsight, what I should have done is throw away the box, make another, seal it with several thinned coats of varnish or similar, and assiduously wipe out the box and stone after use.
However, I didn't. I wrapped it in a plastic bag, and bought some waterstones, which were very fashionable in the woodworking press at the time. That was both good and bad, because the 6000 grit waterstone I bought was much finer than the India, and taught me what 'sharp' really could be. I can still remember the shock at the ease with which a 1/2" chisel pared a piece of pine end-grain, and the cleanness of the cut surface. However, as I sharpened at the bench, the water management problem was a bind, so after a few years I blew some more hard-earned on a pair of Spyderco ceramic stones.
They served well for many a year, until a comment on this forum some years ago that India stones cut far faster than the medium Spyderco, so I dug out the old India, and gave it a try. It's true - the India does cut faster, but the medium Spyderco leaves a finer edge. Conequently, I sought a polishing stone solution; the most cost effective seemed to be the Inigo Jones slate (my inner tightwad rebelled at the price of black Arks!), which after a bit of experimentation, I've stuck with. For now ....