My apologies for the quality of the pictures, the memory card is worth more than the camera, but it's what I've got and it will do with the editing I did on the pics.
I'm trying to hone up a Wostenholm pipe with a slight curve in the cutting edge and have been having nothing but problems. The first problem was it's magnetized from my blade holding jig. I've got a demagnetizer on the way to fix that problem.
The next problem is it's taking an awfully long time and it's still not past the 1k stage. In fact it's taking as long as it took me to hone my first and only wedge. Is my hone not working any more, or is this just an excellent example of extremely hard steel? I am creating an entirely new bevel (it's taped and everything, I want to tape all of my blades to get used to it for if I ever end up with a worked back), so I'm not terribly concerned yet, and there seems to be some small amount of progress, although not enough for my liking.
The third problem is the one that I really need some advice on. The shoulder on the blade is made in such a way that I cannot do an X pattern with a heel leading stroke without a fair amount of the blade not making contact until later in the stroke, and more importantly this type of stroke will scratch up the maker's mark on the tang
. Frankly I'm not sure the last guy that owned this thing however many decades ago ever had the heel sharp to begin with. As you can see from the following picture there is no hone wear on the spine that correlates with the heel of the blade.
View attachment 54296
How do I get the heel sharp, and do I have to take the tape off to waste some of the metal on the spine? So far I've been keeping the tape on (haven't been able to decide on that one myself yet) and doing the following stroke while exerting extra pressure on the heel. I am aware of the fact that at bare minimum if I keep the tape on, I will have to touch up this blade with tape every time a touch up is needed.
View attachment 54297
I'm trying to hone up a Wostenholm pipe with a slight curve in the cutting edge and have been having nothing but problems. The first problem was it's magnetized from my blade holding jig. I've got a demagnetizer on the way to fix that problem.
The next problem is it's taking an awfully long time and it's still not past the 1k stage. In fact it's taking as long as it took me to hone my first and only wedge. Is my hone not working any more, or is this just an excellent example of extremely hard steel? I am creating an entirely new bevel (it's taped and everything, I want to tape all of my blades to get used to it for if I ever end up with a worked back), so I'm not terribly concerned yet, and there seems to be some small amount of progress, although not enough for my liking.
The third problem is the one that I really need some advice on. The shoulder on the blade is made in such a way that I cannot do an X pattern with a heel leading stroke without a fair amount of the blade not making contact until later in the stroke, and more importantly this type of stroke will scratch up the maker's mark on the tang
View attachment 54296
How do I get the heel sharp, and do I have to take the tape off to waste some of the metal on the spine? So far I've been keeping the tape on (haven't been able to decide on that one myself yet) and doing the following stroke while exerting extra pressure on the heel. I am aware of the fact that at bare minimum if I keep the tape on, I will have to touch up this blade with tape every time a touch up is needed.
View attachment 54297