When honing my 7-day set, I found two razors that weren't quite right, compared to the other 5. I hypothesized and they may be slightly warped and tried to do a rolling X. There was improvement, but not enough, so I went to a narrow hone and solved the problem. To make my life easier, I decided to have my two wide hones, a Norton 4K/8K and a Jnat cut in half to make them narrower and this led to a general question that I would like to pose to honers:
All the vintage hones that I have seen (except those used for other purposes like honing a microtome or tools in general), are narrow. Barbers hones are 2" wide and my vintage coticules and Charnley Forest are 1" to 1½" wide. I think that this is because they make honing warped blades easier. My conclusion is that we use 3" hones because that's what's available. They were designed for general tool sharpening and not specifically for razors. Wouldn't it be a good business opportunity for someone to start making narrow hones again, given the resurgence of the straight razor market? Any thoughts?
All the vintage hones that I have seen (except those used for other purposes like honing a microtome or tools in general), are narrow. Barbers hones are 2" wide and my vintage coticules and Charnley Forest are 1" to 1½" wide. I think that this is because they make honing warped blades easier. My conclusion is that we use 3" hones because that's what's available. They were designed for general tool sharpening and not specifically for razors. Wouldn't it be a good business opportunity for someone to start making narrow hones again, given the resurgence of the straight razor market? Any thoughts?