Fromey
Established Member
There's always the Reynolds number which could possibly be adapted to sharpness.
matthewwh":39sdccaa said:I therefore propose thousandths of a Grim as an inverse reading scale so the number can get infinitesimally small as sharpness increases. Indeed we could also go the other way and express the bluntness of very blunt things, footballs, instruments etc, in Kilogrims.
Er - adequate edges I guess, but I go finer. I don't recall saying anything about 240 grit anyway, but I guess you'd know, as you hang on my every word! :lol:bugbear":3262kbmo said:......
Perfect edges can be got using only 240 grit abrasives,
I keep them in cupboards and drawers. Is this some sort of secret which only I have discovered? I'd be very surprised.and metal tools don't rust. Must be ley lines or something.
BugBear
Jacob":vdvm1uvw said:Magic! Or is it ventilation?
Must be. Old beardy is looking after my tools! Praise the lord!Doug B":123ugm07 said:Jacob":123ugm07 said:Magic! Or is it ventilation?
Divine intervention perchance :?:
No skills":wruyj7v9 said:As per the board standard someone should be complaining about this thread going off on a tangent by now.
Praise be the tangent! the last part of this thread has provided me some much needed humor this evening.
:ho2 :ho2 :ho2
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