Sharpening
Mar. 2nd, 2007 09:52 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Awhile back,
3ravensringo loaned me a knife-sharpening DVD. While I still haven't gotten all the way through it, I decided that I had gotten far enough (though the overview and demonstration of the whole sharpening process) that if I didn't actually try to sharpen something soon it risked falling into the category of things that I theoretically know how to do but haven't ever actually demonstrated that that's the case.
I went to the Woodcraft President's Day sale a few weeks back (on President's Day, go figure!) and got myself, among other things, a combination 800/4000 grit waterstone. Last night I soaked it for half an hour (or maybe a little more) and got myself an old, dull paring knife out of the kitchen (if it works, great, if not, it'll still probably be an improvement :p ) and went to town on the 800 grit side. Five or six strokes back-and-forth on each side, rinse the stone, repeat. Unfortunately, I may have bitten off a little much; after what felt like about half an hour of grinding, I still hadn't made much of a difference as far as I could tell, especially on the badly blunted areas (which is where I was focusing). I'll probably try some more tonight, but I can see how this might be a case where a grinding wheel or belt sander may have been a better place to start. I'm definitely removing metal from the areas where I want to be removing it, and the whole process is working approximately how I expected it to, it's just not as fast as I had thought it might be. (This is not surprising, as my primary examples for sharpening have been people who have been sharpening and, in some cases, making knives for years--they're obviously going to be much faster than I am).
So all in all I am happy with how it is coming along so far, and looking forward to seeing the results when I'm finished. Current focus is on resisting the urge to press what I feel like would be "too hard" and to trying to keep my strokes distributed across the surface of the stone so it'll wear down evenly. [EDIT: fixed flipped primary and secondary terms] I'm also thinking about maybe lifting up just a little bit so the force is concentrated on the secondary bevel (which holds the edge) edge instead of on the primary bevel until I've removed most of the bluntness. Thoughts?
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I went to the Woodcraft President's Day sale a few weeks back (on President's Day, go figure!) and got myself, among other things, a combination 800/4000 grit waterstone. Last night I soaked it for half an hour (or maybe a little more) and got myself an old, dull paring knife out of the kitchen (if it works, great, if not, it'll still probably be an improvement :p ) and went to town on the 800 grit side. Five or six strokes back-and-forth on each side, rinse the stone, repeat. Unfortunately, I may have bitten off a little much; after what felt like about half an hour of grinding, I still hadn't made much of a difference as far as I could tell, especially on the badly blunted areas (which is where I was focusing). I'll probably try some more tonight, but I can see how this might be a case where a grinding wheel or belt sander may have been a better place to start. I'm definitely removing metal from the areas where I want to be removing it, and the whole process is working approximately how I expected it to, it's just not as fast as I had thought it might be. (This is not surprising, as my primary examples for sharpening have been people who have been sharpening and, in some cases, making knives for years--they're obviously going to be much faster than I am).
So all in all I am happy with how it is coming along so far, and looking forward to seeing the results when I'm finished. Current focus is on resisting the urge to press what I feel like would be "too hard" and to trying to keep my strokes distributed across the surface of the stone so it'll wear down evenly. [EDIT: fixed flipped primary and secondary terms] I'm also thinking about maybe lifting up just a little bit so the force is concentrated on the secondary bevel (which holds the edge) edge instead of on the primary bevel until I've removed most of the bluntness. Thoughts?