custard
Established Member
After six minutes, or 600 metres of sharpening things were looking better,
But bitter experience from having done this many times warns not to count your chickens. It might look better, but I bet I'm not even half way through yet.
After twelve minutes, or 1200 metres, there's clearly light at the end of the tunnel, just one pit remains,
It would be viable to stop now and then grind this last pit off when I reach it in the course of normal sharpening. However, I decided to plug on...and on...and on.
It actually took nineteen minutes, that's 1900 metres or over a mile of sharpening before all the pitting was removed.
It's worth remembering that this is a fairly optimum set up, a coarse 120 grit paper, a long run of abrasive that's stretched tight, even the little handle to help take the strain. Now think about some enthusiastic but inexperienced hobbyist trying to do this on an eight inch long 1000 grit stone, and kidding himself he can move onto an 8000 grit stone "for the last few strokes" when he's actually less than half way through. The poor guy would be there all day, and his fingers would be frozen solid. Actually that's not true, a pound to a penny he'd have packed it in as a bad job and stomped out of his shed in a black mood! The message is, if you're going to sand out even light pitting then don't underestimate the scale of the challenge, and set yourself up for success with the right set up.
Anyhow, with all the pitting removed, then and only then is it time to polish up the face. And this is what it then looks like,
But bitter experience from having done this many times warns not to count your chickens. It might look better, but I bet I'm not even half way through yet.
After twelve minutes, or 1200 metres, there's clearly light at the end of the tunnel, just one pit remains,
It would be viable to stop now and then grind this last pit off when I reach it in the course of normal sharpening. However, I decided to plug on...and on...and on.
It actually took nineteen minutes, that's 1900 metres or over a mile of sharpening before all the pitting was removed.
It's worth remembering that this is a fairly optimum set up, a coarse 120 grit paper, a long run of abrasive that's stretched tight, even the little handle to help take the strain. Now think about some enthusiastic but inexperienced hobbyist trying to do this on an eight inch long 1000 grit stone, and kidding himself he can move onto an 8000 grit stone "for the last few strokes" when he's actually less than half way through. The poor guy would be there all day, and his fingers would be frozen solid. Actually that's not true, a pound to a penny he'd have packed it in as a bad job and stomped out of his shed in a black mood! The message is, if you're going to sand out even light pitting then don't underestimate the scale of the challenge, and set yourself up for success with the right set up.
Anyhow, with all the pitting removed, then and only then is it time to polish up the face. And this is what it then looks like,