I no longer have the jig that appears in the video, so this thread has spurred me to make another.
The weakness of the original was always the clamping. The first one was not very secure, and even the one that worked well required the use of a screwdriver, so I thought we could do better.
This one is just two saw cuts at 42 degrees from the broad face, which is 48 degrees off vertical. As a TS only goes to 45 deg it means running the wood on its edge. That results in 42 deg from the flat which is 2 deg more than the grind. That way I hone just the very outer edge.
Ideally the cut is made with a 1/8" kerf, flat-top-grind, rip blade. All my blades were stolen, and I have replaced them with thin-kerf ones. I like the thin-kerf ones, but it does mean that I had to jiggle the fence over by half a mil or so to widen the kerf, and then the bottom of the groove needed a bit of a tickle to get the corner clean and square.
Then 4 magnets are set at just the right height to hold the knives in place. Had they been a snug fit I could have just shoved them in, but they were loose, so a bit of DS tape saw to that.
Because the magnets were so close together I found that as I pushed one in, the other popped up. That's why in each pair, one is face up and one is face down.
I've actually made two today, one for me and one for a mate. I originally put the magnets further apart and tried to screw them (they are countersunk) but the screws came through to the slot. By moving them closer together there is room for a short screw, but even my shortest were too long, so I stuck with the DS tape (ha-ha).
The block is about 6mm shorter than the knives, so I can lever them out easily, and the magnets offer just enough hold that the knives don't drop out, whilst keeping them securely in place.
It works perfectly and there is no tooling or clamping to bother with.
In the olden days this would have been the basis of a magazine article...