memzey
Established Member
So is there any advantage for woodworkers in using green compound as opposed to autosol?
memzey":1ad00xet said:So is there any advantage for woodworkers in using green compound as opposed to autosol?
I suspect the answer to this question is more complex than we'd like.memzey":2gbtn42u said:So is there any advantage for woodworkers in using green compound as opposed to autosol?
I suspect (given the nature of Chrome Oxide and Rouge) that over time users became habituated to green being "fairly fine" and red being "very fine", and that makers of later dressings merely followed the convention.ED65":21saa6rn said:I suspect the answer to this question is more complex than we'd like.memzey":21saa6rn said:So is there any advantage for woodworkers in using green compound as opposed to autosol?
The problem is that today many green compounds, which users naturally suppose are made from chromium oxide (and may be marketed as exactly that), are not only that any more but are partly aluminium oxide, with added green dye to adjust the colour. And based on this it is of course entirely possible that the abrasive component of some green buffing compounds or honing sticks is entirely alox.
I can attest to that personally and I've read years of posts from others – not all beginners by any means! – that show they're not that clued in on it too. As you know, people get hung up on materials being the solution and forget (or deny, or don't know) that it's mostly about technique.D_W":1qmfdlxa said:I do think most beginners don't have a clue about the wire edge, and how it continues to exist to the finish stones, and that's probably what they should manage rather than chasing finer stones and pastes.
That confirms everything balanced that I've read about the stupidly-high grits and their benefit. Of course this isn't what you hear from the guys who have fallen deep into a confirmation-bias trance, which might have an aspect of the audiophile delusion.D_W":1qmfdlxa said:Some of us have wasted our time with this stuff, but another engineer friend of mine *had* to get the shapton glasstone 30k. 5mms of abrasive for $300+. He had the 16k, I had the ($70) shapton cream at the time and we planed wood with all three. This is separate from the debate about finish after planing, we couldn't tell the difference in shine on the surface *before* finishing. Nor could we honestly tell any difference in the resistance from the plane. But it took longer to do all of those steps.
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