On Monday, June 15, 2020 at 8:54:37 PM UTC-5, rbowman wrote:
On 06/15/2020 01:13 PM, A K wrote:
For years, I have never been able to get a sharp edge using a whetstone.
Especially with Swiss army knives.
Can someone help me?
https://www.amazon.com/Work-Sharp-WS...07CVN8HV5?th=1
They aren't cheap but there are guides for several different tools.
Smith's makes a similar type that is cheaper.
For a budget approach, the Smith's Pocket Pal is cheap and handy:
https://www.amazon.com/Smiths-PP1-Po.../dp/B000O8OTNC
https://bladereviews.com/smiths-pocket-pal-pp1-review/
Lansky has a few different varieties:
https://www.amazon.com/Lansky-Sharpe...sky+Sharpeners
One scheme is a clamp that goes on the blade with guide rods to maintain
the angle. That works fairly well for larger blades. Then there are the
crock stick types. Mine has a V shaped carbide cutter for roughing out
the edge, plus the rods. The idea is keeping the blade vertical going
down the angled rod is easier than maintaining an angle on a stone or
flat diamond sharpener.
https://www.amazon.com/Fiskars-Knife.../dp/B0000950Q4
I was feeling lazy the other night and the Fiskars was closed to hand.
They work too.
Most of those will give you a serviceable edge. They might not be sharp
enough to shave the hair off your arm but I don't need hairless arms.
That Smith model is almost identical to what I have now.
I have used the Lansky's in the past and they are good.
I think the problems is with the stainless steel that Victorinox uses.
I have used my sharpener on a dirt cheap kitchen knife and gotten a better edge than I got on the Victorinox knife.
It just will not hold a good edge after it leaves the factory.
I will never buy another one.
Andy