David C
In Memorium
Corneel,
I was amused by your maintainance post, thought you freehand sharpeners had developed inbuilt protractors.
From the evolutionary backwaters of Eclipse honing guide use, I can assure you that a backbevelled blade is a wonderous thing, taming the most ornery of dense, interlocked, exotic hardwoods. It is also no trouble to maintain, and the wire edges are easy to feel if you go about it in the right way.
There is a problem with the Veritas and Quangsheng approach. We have absolutely no need to have a blade ground at say 38 degrees, and another at 48 degrees. Blades can all be ground at 25 degrees. Only the very small honed bevel angle needs to be changed.
If one thinks of the thickness of a fine shaving, 1 to 2 thou", the width of honing required for a back bevel (or a bevel up blade) can be kept very small indeed. I use something of the order of 0.2 to 0.3 mm. Thus the blade could be returned to standard use with a minimum of grinding.
Best wishes,
David Charlesworth
I was amused by your maintainance post, thought you freehand sharpeners had developed inbuilt protractors.
From the evolutionary backwaters of Eclipse honing guide use, I can assure you that a backbevelled blade is a wonderous thing, taming the most ornery of dense, interlocked, exotic hardwoods. It is also no trouble to maintain, and the wire edges are easy to feel if you go about it in the right way.
There is a problem with the Veritas and Quangsheng approach. We have absolutely no need to have a blade ground at say 38 degrees, and another at 48 degrees. Blades can all be ground at 25 degrees. Only the very small honed bevel angle needs to be changed.
If one thinks of the thickness of a fine shaving, 1 to 2 thou", the width of honing required for a back bevel (or a bevel up blade) can be kept very small indeed. I use something of the order of 0.2 to 0.3 mm. Thus the blade could be returned to standard use with a minimum of grinding.
Best wishes,
David Charlesworth