ED65":3u3cujpn said:
Ttrees":3u3cujpn said:
I suppose I might get used to having a look at everything before starting, sometimes.... and grind a few tools in the one go and rotate the tools as they heat up a bit.
Are you regrinding primaries routinely? I never grind new purchases, I just ignore the coarse factory finish on the primary and go straight to honing, and on stuff I've sharpened previously I will generally only grind again to repair a chip. I've occasionally redone the primary to a shallower angle than I'd done it the first time, although I sometimes do that by hand to check the time it takes.
Ttrees":3u3cujpn said:
I'd say it would easily take four times as long to use the 400 grit DMD stone I have ...
Oh yeah that's waaay too fine for that job. 400 is finer than the orange side of a Norton combination stone!
I should have been more specific, I meant get in the habit of inspection before starting for the day, I regrind the primary bevels probably every ten times, but I dont count the honings, so it could be more, could be less?
I wonder how much a suitable stone for hand grinding would cost?
Say I didn't have the belt sander...I could get a good few feet of 80 grit or rougher sandpaper and lay it on the bench,
but that would mean there would be loose grit on the bench.
Not for me #-o
I have yet to see a real world example of grinding by hand, on a chisel with a good sized secondary bevel.
I've found, as I'm honing freehand on my washita, and my 1800 fancy diamond hone (really really dulled to effectly be a much more refined hone gives a mirror polish now"don't ask me how its got to this stage" ) even with a fresh ground primary, I will do the following....
I start on the bevel on the washita, feel for the burr catching with a handful of shavings, but not pull the oil, nor the burr off...
flip iron, and either pull off or bend the burr to the bevel side with the fine diamond....
Back on the washita working the bevel again, no more than a few seconds, flip to the back side on the diamond...
Flip again to the bevel side, but on the diamond this time, then the back and bevel till its leaving a slicing sort of scratch pattern...
I have been trying to get used to the Klausz method of flipping every stroke efficiently, especially when the secondary grows.
As well as omiting flipping onto the back, after the second go on the washita, with not much sucess.
And yes I can get hair popping sharpness with a fresh ground bevel in a quarter of the time, or less, but the edge dulls instantly.
Tom