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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water
cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. |
#2
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You probably bought one of those diamond coated steels. They're nice. We
have a butcher shop on our farm. We went from having our knives ground often to keeping our own knives sharp with the diamond coated. (well that's what they call it anyway....I doubt if there's diamond on it) Ivan "Loren A. Coe" wrote in message news:45U0c.96296$Xp.428508@attbi_s54... last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. |
#3
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On Tue, 2 Mar 2004 01:33:58 -0600, "Ivan"
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: You probably bought one of those diamond coated steels. They're nice. We have a butcher shop on our farm. We went from having our knives ground often to keeping our own knives sharp with the diamond coated. (well that's what they call it anyway....I doubt if there's diamond on it) You would probably be wrong. Minute industrial grit. And yes they work amazingly well. For tools as well as knives. (Well, I have a grindstone of the same stuff, and I use the little "steels" on clippers etc.) Give a couple to your wife as earrings. "Here dear. I bought you some diamond earrings!" They _always_ know G ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#4
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On Tue, 02 Mar 2004 16:56:08 +0800, Old Nick wrote:
|On Tue, 2 Mar 2004 01:33:58 -0600, "Ivan" |vaguely proposed a theory |......and in reply I say!: | |You probably bought one of those diamond coated steels. They're nice. We |have a butcher shop on our farm. We went from having our knives ground |often to keeping our own knives sharp with the diamond coated. (well that's |what they call it anyway....I doubt if there's diamond on it) | |You would probably be wrong. Minute industrial grit. And yes they work |amazingly well. For tools as well as knives. (Well, I have a |grindstone of the same stuff, and I use the little "steels" on |clippers etc.) OK, I'm convinced, and I'm tired of dull kitchen knives. Where does one buy a good steel, and how can you tell it's a good one? Rex in Fort Worth |
#5
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![]() OK, I'm convinced, and I'm tired of dull kitchen knives. Where does one buy a good steel, and how can you tell it's a good one? AAguy at a county faair was selling a knife sharpener. Did damazing things with a mortar hoe, rusty knives, etc. Suddenly a light flashed... Now at garage sales if I find a rusty butcher knife, it'll soon be mine. That sort of iron seems to take a good (not long lasting) edge (slices paper-a test). It will also raise heck with a tomato. Paul in AJ AZ |
#6
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Pep674 wrote:
OK, I'm convinced, and I'm tired of dull kitchen knives. Where does one buy a good steel, and how can you tell it's a good one? AAguy at a county faair was selling a knife sharpener. Did damazing things with a mortar hoe, rusty knives, etc. Suddenly a light flashed... Now at garage sales if I find a rusty butcher knife, it'll soon be mine. That sort of iron seems to take a good (not long lasting) edge (slices paper-a test). It will also raise heck with a tomato. Paul in AJ AZ From my experience, - my father-in-law's dad was a butcher - the steel is 1. long for a long slicing blade 2. isn't stainless steel. 3. is cut not stamped or rolled. If you ever had a wood scraper - and know how to square the end and then burnish it these thin slicing edges cut the wood nicely. On a steel, the pattern is long sharp but hard and firm - not cutting sharp. It shears metal off the knife blade with long arcing strokes. My late father-in-law sharpened in two ways - blade away from him and slicing away - Typically when he had to really take some metal off - due to a nick. But the way he did most sharpening was sharp blade coming down on either sides toward the hand that holds the handle. Nice to have a hand guard just in case the metal breaks or jumps off the steel. I think Steels were shaper cut - a machine like that - pulling the full length cutting the slot. Likely a die pull. A movable gripping type to contour to the tip. Martin -- Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn @ home at Lion's Lair with our computer NRA LOH, NRA Life NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder |
#8
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"Loren A. Coe" wrote in message news:45U0c.96296$Xp.428508@attbi_s54...
last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. The old style steels were meant to straighten a turned edge and were not for metal removal. The new diamond ones are abrasive and remove metal. 2 different ways of operating |
#9
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Beecrofter wrote:
"Loren A. Coe" wrote in message news:45U0c.96296$Xp.428508@attbi_s54... last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. The old style steels were meant to straighten a turned edge and were not for metal removal. The new diamond ones are abrasive and remove metal. 2 different ways of operating yes, agreed. this is the old style, a Chicago 12", it may be stainless, but i don't know. it is only 8" of working surface, the fine longitudenal groves. these are sold seperately or with knife sets, made in China. WalMart carries the sets, Kohls carries the sets and the steels. if i were doing it again, i might be tempted for a nicer, longer one, but this one is quite handy for the length of edges i have. eventaully, i should end up with both. dunno about the diamond type, as you say, a different deal altogther, a newbie could probably do some real damage to an edge. another tip for novices, _patience_ is the key. talking to a butcher may help but you will see/get difference techniques for everyone you ask. also, the edge condition determines whether a steel can restore the edge and i advise to start looking at them under 10x or so and learn to recognize a good edge that is just dull. these two cleavers surprised me, i did look at them and they looked fairly nice, just dull. good luck, --Loren |
#10
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In article Kp51c.165037$jk2.606971@attbi_s53, Loren A. Coe
wrote: Beecrofter wrote: "Loren A. Coe" wrote in message news:45U0c.96296$Xp.428508@attbi_s54... last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. The old style steels were meant to straighten a turned edge and were not for metal removal. The new diamond ones are abrasive and remove metal. 2 different ways of operating yes, agreed. this is the old style, a Chicago 12", it may be stainless, but i don't know. it is only 8" of working surface, the fine longitudenal groves. these are sold seperately or with knife sets, made in China. WalMart carries the sets, Kohls carries the sets and the steels. if i were doing it again, i might be tempted for a nicer, longer one, but this one is quite handy for the length of edges i have. eventaully, i should end up with both. dunno about the diamond type, as you say, a different deal altogther, a newbie could probably do some real damage to an edge. another tip for novices, _patience_ is the key. talking to a butcher may help but you will see/get difference techniques for everyone you ask. also, the edge condition determines whether a steel can restore the edge and i advise to start looking at them under 10x or so and learn to recognize a good edge that is just dull. these two cleavers surprised me, i did look at them and they looked fairly nice, just dull. good luck, --Loren I have 3 steels in a rack near my knives. A diamond steel for actual sharpening. A standard honing steel for regular maintenance. And a "Butcher's" Steel, a mirror finished glass hard rod of high carbon steel used to burnish the edge perfect. Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. |
#11
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![]() "Ernie Leimkuhler" wrote in message ... In article Kp51c.165037$jk2.606971@attbi_s53, Loren A. Coe wrote: Beecrofter wrote: "Loren A. Coe" wrote in message news:45U0c.96296$Xp.428508@attbi_s54... last year i bot a cheapie HF sharpening grinder (with slow water cooled 2"x8" wheel) worked fine, restored many edges over several weeks. then, after talking my brother, who worked in a slaughter house as a youth, i bot a decent steel (steele?). i have yet to use the grinder again (for kitchen knives). today was the real test, a couple of _really_ dull 6" cleavers that i missed last year. not wanting to set up the grinder for just two edges i tried just the steele. it did the job just fine. i just sliced some onion with each of them. go figure, too soon old, too late smart. --Loren p.s. just fyi, for newbies, i have "played" with steeles for years, never appreciating the results. there is some technique, and a decent steel is required. prior (dismal) attempts were with chrome plated (cheapie) models. The old style steels were meant to straighten a turned edge and were not for metal removal. The new diamond ones are abrasive and remove metal. 2 different ways of operating yes, agreed. this is the old style, a Chicago 12", it may be stainless, but i don't know. it is only 8" of working surface, the fine longitudenal groves. these are sold seperately or with knife sets, made in China. WalMart carries the sets, Kohls carries the sets and the steels. if i were doing it again, i might be tempted for a nicer, longer one, but this one is quite handy for the length of edges i have. eventaully, i should end up with both. dunno about the diamond type, as you say, a different deal altogther, a newbie could probably do some real damage to an edge. another tip for novices, _patience_ is the key. talking to a butcher may help but you will see/get difference techniques for everyone you ask. also, the edge condition determines whether a steel can restore the edge and i advise to start looking at them under 10x or so and learn to recognize a good edge that is just dull. these two cleavers surprised me, i did look at them and they looked fairly nice, just dull. good luck, --Loren I have 3 steels in a rack near my knives. A diamond steel for actual sharpening. A standard honing steel for regular maintenance. And a "Butcher's" Steel, a mirror finished glass hard rod of high carbon steel used to burnish the edge perfect. Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. How much life can we expect from a diamond steel? |
#12
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On Tue, 2 Mar 2004 14:28:47 -0600, "Ivan"
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: I hate to start a bottomposttoppost argument. But if you are going to bottom post, could do a _bit_ of snipping before your one-liner? How often are you going to use it? Most of them are diamonds embeddded in Nickel or other metal AFAIK. They last a long time. They make the job so easy they are worth it. You can _feel_ them biting. BTW. You don't need to get a greta long one. I use a little rectangular thing about 3cm wide and 8 cm long. I bought 3 grades for about $15. How much life can we expect from a diamond steel? ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#13
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![]() I have had mine for 12 years and it stIn article , Ivan wrote: "Ernie Leimkuhler" wrote in message ... In article Kp51c.165037$jk2.606971@attbi_s53, Loren A. Coe wrote: Beecrofter wrote: "Loren A. Coe" wrote in message snip another tip for novices, _patience_ is the key. talking to a butcher may help but you will see/get difference techniques for everyone you ask. also, the edge condition determines whether a steel can restore the edge and i advise to start looking at them under 10x or so and learn to recognize a good edge that is just dull. these two cleavers surprised me, i did look at them and they looked fairly nice, just dull. good luck, --Loren I have 3 steels in a rack near my knives. A diamond steel for actual sharpening. A standard honing steel for regular maintenance. And a "Butcher's" Steel, a mirror finished glass hard rod of high carbon steel used to burnish the edge perfect. Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. How much life can we expect from a diamond steel? I have had mine for 12 years and it still works fine |
#14
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![]() I have 3 steels in a rack near my knives. A diamond steel for actual sharpening. A standard honing steel for regular maintenance. And a "Butcher's" Steel, a mirror finished glass hard rod of high carbon steel used to burnish the edge perfect. Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. After I started putting the final hone on customers knives with a little green chromium oxide on a leather belt they can slice a tomato so thin it only has one side! |
#15
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After I started putting the final hone on customers knives with a
little green chromium oxide on a leather belt they can slice a tomato so thin it only has one side! I use green stuff too. When I go to check a knife by shaving my arm, the hairs jump off from fright. |
#16
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On Tue, 02 Mar 2004 19:58:39 GMT, Ernie Leimkuhler
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: This is roughly what I was going to say I have 3 steels in a rack near my knives. A diamond steel for actual sharpening. A standard honing steel for regular maintenance. And a "Butcher's" Steel, a mirror finished glass hard rod of high carbon steel used to burnish the edge perfect. Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#17
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On Tue, 02 Mar 2004 19:58:39 GMT, Ernie Leimkuhler
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: Actually, the tomatoes have a problem. Isn't it the tomato that _pleases_ you that will see the sharp edge? G Use all 3 in succession and beware the tomato that dares offend me. ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
#18
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#19
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#20
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while I have a number of steels of all grades and types, I find myself
using Crock Sticks of various types for most of t he knives on my person or around the house. If its really bad, Ill drag out one of the Lansky sharpening sets and build a good edge, then finish with a crock stick My carry Kukri ,which is very very old, will shave arm hairs using this process. The Henkles (sp?) kitchen knives come out scary sharp Gunner The two highest achievements of the human mind are the twin concepts of "loyalty" and "duty." Whenever these twin concepts fall into disrepute -- get out of there fast! You may possibly save yourself, but it is too late to save that society. It is doomed. " Lazarus Long |
#21
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![]() "Gunner" wrote in message ... ... Gunner The two highest achievements of the human mind are the twin concepts of "loyalty" and "duty." Whenever these twin concepts fall into disrepute -- get out of there fast! You may possibly save yourself, but it is too late to save that society. It is doomed. " Lazarus Long Hey Gunner... Isn't it time for a new sig? I mean - its a bit sad quoting a fictional character who approved of and practised incest. Don't you think? Cheers Jeff |
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