Let it be said that I have a new found appreciation for how hard repairing an edge can be.
Last night I decided to repair the edge of an adoration 292 that had some 1/64" chips taken out of the edge. So I broke out the norton stones and started with 220. Holy crap does that stone chew up steel. It took about 5-10 minutes to flatten the edge and remove the chips. I taped off the spine and started with the 1k stone trying to set the bevel. After about 15 minutes of trial and error I thought I had the bevel set, but upon inspecting the edge I found that the previous owner had set a bizarre pattern to the bevel. Basically they had used poor pressure on the razor and had an uneven bevel. The good news is that I managed to put. Nice bevel on the edge, bad news is that the razor edge looks odd.
Last night I decided to repair the edge of an adoration 292 that had some 1/64" chips taken out of the edge. So I broke out the norton stones and started with 220. Holy crap does that stone chew up steel. It took about 5-10 minutes to flatten the edge and remove the chips. I taped off the spine and started with the 1k stone trying to set the bevel. After about 15 minutes of trial and error I thought I had the bevel set, but upon inspecting the edge I found that the previous owner had set a bizarre pattern to the bevel. Basically they had used poor pressure on the razor and had an uneven bevel. The good news is that I managed to put. Nice bevel on the edge, bad news is that the razor edge looks odd.
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