Easy to get confused when it comes to this subject John! In addition to the competing grading systems that you need a table to check against, it's well know that various products aren't the same even when they're rated the same on paper. Sometimes the difference is slight but other times it's really stark. This naturally makes for some confusion because people think they're not grasping something obvious when in fact the problem is as the manufacturer's end.
Honest John":1hdswuss said:
And I understand that some people use water stones at 6000 - 10000.
Yeah but they're silly. This will ignite a furious debate in some circles (possibly here too) but
generally it's a waste of time to use stones that fine unless the goal is the appearance of the bevel and not the sharpness of the edge.
Honest John":1hdswuss said:
If I was shape the primary bevel on a fast cutting 300 diamond plate, then turned it over to the 1000 side to refine, what size water stone should I go to next?
Take your pick! It literally doesn't matter what you use next as long as you're happy with the how things go and with the results. One person might go 1000 > 4000 > 8000, another will hit it briefly with a 3000 and get back to work, and of course someone out there would be happy to use the tool straight after the 1000 diamond plate.
Since I recently got a 1000 diamond plate to try out I can say that I would plump for going straight to a strop (loaded, not bare). I tested this out the other day to definitively check and I'm more than happy with what it'll do on a plane iron. I might go to more trouble for a chisel, depending on the day and what direction the wind is blowing. More seriously it would depend on what I was using the chisel for, for fine paring I think I'd use something finer after the 1000 diamond plate and then strop lightly to finish off, but for general chopping duties I think 1000 > loaded strop will do it most of the time for me.
Can I just check something though, are you "shaping" the primary bevel because the honing bevel has become too large? One of the advantages of the aggressiveness of diamond sharpening media is that you can ditch the primary/secondary bevel thing if you wanted to and just hone a single bevel (flat or convex as per your preference). You can do this with any sharpening system of course but it's particularly fast on diamonds.
Honest John":1hdswuss said:
My coarsest water stone marked at 600 doesn't seem as abrasive as my 1000 rated diamond?
Waterstones are known as fast cutters, but diamond is
fast. Because the grit on diamond plates is so hard it abrades steel much faster than most of the opposition so comparisons of cutting speed aren't useful if you're more interested in the scratch pattern, which controls the smoothness of the cutting edge.
Honest John":1hdswuss said:
The Axminster Rider diamond stone that I am considering is double sided at 300/1000 and considered as coarse and fine.
Might I ask, why are you thinking of getting this when you have so much sharpening gear already? Is it a 'the grass is always greener' thing?