Dear straight razor honers. I have three questions for you today.
- to what point do you chase a scratch free finish at 8k? can you still see some scratches after using just water, very light X strokes until the razor sticks to the stone? because I can see them, I just don't know how I should interpret them. with the rigth angle of light hitting the bevel it seems like a super smooth finnish, but with different angles I can make out clear glints of scratching
- does stropping usually produce more scratching? after giving my razor good stropping after getting a near mirror finnish off of 8k, there was lots of new scratches. not deep, but clearly more noticable then off the stone.
- if you want to change the bevel angle from say, from 18° to 16°, how do you do it?
I have spent my evening by training my honing skills. I noticed my experimental Gold Monkey had noticable scratches on the bevel face. So I went to my 8k and tried to get rid of them, tried different strokes, slurry and water, more and less pressure/torque etc, often inspected the bevel face during the process. I got to a point where I was quite happy, jointed the edge, brought it back just for good measure. Now there still are feint scratches that I am able to make out in certain angles of light hitting the steel.
After stropping, there are tons of little scratches all along the bevel face. Now, after stropping, the HHT result improves drastically, from only sometimes cutting the hair (fresh off the stone, no stropping), to not giving it a single chance and always confidently poping it (after stropping).
I know, the shave is what matters. I will test that later on when it's time to shave and see for myself.
I also measured bevel angles of my razors. The Gold Monkey is at around 16.5 to 17.5 along the length of the blade. It shaves better than my other razors, which I measured to be around 19°. With the Gold Monkey, I taped the edge and wore the spine down drastically. The reason was to make the razor sit flat on the hone. I knew this would bring the angle down, and it did, and I actually really like it. But I am hesitant to do that to my other razors, which are French vintage ones for about 20 dollars. I learned to hone on them after a Gold Dollar. I did lose quite a bit of blade's width in the process,I was trying to straighten the edge and remove a frown from one. I probably increased the angle after what I did to them, compared to how they came to me. Say I bought a brand new Ralph Aust for 200, would I also have to grind down the spine like that? To add angle, simple, put a layer of tape on the spine and boom, I just gained roughly 1° of angle. But to reduce the angle by 1°, I would have to reduce the spine's thickness by 2x the thickness of the tape.
- to what point do you chase a scratch free finish at 8k? can you still see some scratches after using just water, very light X strokes until the razor sticks to the stone? because I can see them, I just don't know how I should interpret them. with the rigth angle of light hitting the bevel it seems like a super smooth finnish, but with different angles I can make out clear glints of scratching
- does stropping usually produce more scratching? after giving my razor good stropping after getting a near mirror finnish off of 8k, there was lots of new scratches. not deep, but clearly more noticable then off the stone.
- if you want to change the bevel angle from say, from 18° to 16°, how do you do it?
I have spent my evening by training my honing skills. I noticed my experimental Gold Monkey had noticable scratches on the bevel face. So I went to my 8k and tried to get rid of them, tried different strokes, slurry and water, more and less pressure/torque etc, often inspected the bevel face during the process. I got to a point where I was quite happy, jointed the edge, brought it back just for good measure. Now there still are feint scratches that I am able to make out in certain angles of light hitting the steel.
After stropping, there are tons of little scratches all along the bevel face. Now, after stropping, the HHT result improves drastically, from only sometimes cutting the hair (fresh off the stone, no stropping), to not giving it a single chance and always confidently poping it (after stropping).
I know, the shave is what matters. I will test that later on when it's time to shave and see for myself.
I also measured bevel angles of my razors. The Gold Monkey is at around 16.5 to 17.5 along the length of the blade. It shaves better than my other razors, which I measured to be around 19°. With the Gold Monkey, I taped the edge and wore the spine down drastically. The reason was to make the razor sit flat on the hone. I knew this would bring the angle down, and it did, and I actually really like it. But I am hesitant to do that to my other razors, which are French vintage ones for about 20 dollars. I learned to hone on them after a Gold Dollar. I did lose quite a bit of blade's width in the process,I was trying to straighten the edge and remove a frown from one. I probably increased the angle after what I did to them, compared to how they came to me. Say I bought a brand new Ralph Aust for 200, would I also have to grind down the spine like that? To add angle, simple, put a layer of tape on the spine and boom, I just gained roughly 1° of angle. But to reduce the angle by 1°, I would have to reduce the spine's thickness by 2x the thickness of the tape.