keeping it sharp?
keeping it sharp?
I just purchased a delica. What is the cheapest easiest way for me to keep the edge razor sharp? I've heard having a guide to keep the knife at a perfect angle all the time is the easiest way for a newb to make a knife this sharp... fill me in.... I have several sharpeners at my disposal. Diamond, ceramic, and stone. I've just never been able to put a very good edge on any of my other cheap knives and I don't want to let my spyderco get dull.
Hi skcusloa, welcome to the forum.
Your should try the <A TARGET=_blank HREF="http://www.spyderco.com/online_product_ ... ">Spyderco Sharpmaker</A>
Ted
Your should try the <A TARGET=_blank HREF="http://www.spyderco.com/online_product_ ... ">Spyderco Sharpmaker</A>
Ted
skcusloa,
Contact spyderco (maybe Joyce jlaituri@spyderco.com or SFO) I believe that you may be able to get video tapes. As for your method straight I believe you to mean vertical, pull instead of push past the stones. I don't use too much pressure. Also corners only for serrated edges. Hope this helps.
Chris
Be Excellent to each other.
Contact spyderco (maybe Joyce jlaituri@spyderco.com or SFO) I believe that you may be able to get video tapes. As for your method straight I believe you to mean vertical, pull instead of push past the stones. I don't use too much pressure. Also corners only for serrated edges. Hope this helps.
Chris
Be Excellent to each other.
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thombrogan
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Skcusloa,
Welcome to the Spyderco forum!
Eventually, all metal will fatigue. Especially at as thin of a spot as a knife's edge. When that happens, you will either need to regrind the edge or make due with an edge that gets sharp really fast and dulls really fast and eventually never gets that sharp anymore.
However, with a diamond benchstone or pocket stone and your white Spyderco Sharpmaker hones, you easily maintain and restore your Delica's edge. When a new edge needs to be ground, freehand a new rough edge into the Delica. This should be either done at about the current angle or slightly thinner than what you currently have. Just scrub the blade into the diamond hone until a burr runs down the entire edge, then repeat on the other side. Next, use the white hones to set the final edge. Go firm at first and then gradually use less and less pressure with each alternating stroke until you're barely touching the blade. From there, and before there, too, you'll have many touch-ups and resharpenings with just the white Sharpmaker hones before you need to break out the diamond.
Welcome to the Spyderco forum!
Eventually, all metal will fatigue. Especially at as thin of a spot as a knife's edge. When that happens, you will either need to regrind the edge or make due with an edge that gets sharp really fast and dulls really fast and eventually never gets that sharp anymore.
However, with a diamond benchstone or pocket stone and your white Spyderco Sharpmaker hones, you easily maintain and restore your Delica's edge. When a new edge needs to be ground, freehand a new rough edge into the Delica. This should be either done at about the current angle or slightly thinner than what you currently have. Just scrub the blade into the diamond hone until a burr runs down the entire edge, then repeat on the other side. Next, use the white hones to set the final edge. Go firm at first and then gradually use less and less pressure with each alternating stroke until you're barely touching the blade. From there, and before there, too, you'll have many touch-ups and resharpenings with just the white Sharpmaker hones before you need to break out the diamond.
Even though I fully agree with thombrogan, I would like to amend his post. I find a rough diamond grid (#220 or #320) to rough to go directly to the white stones, so I would definitely use the greys before going to the whites. Alternatively, you can of course use a finer diamond stone (about #600-1000) which is about as fine as the greys (the ceramic rods I believe were never grid rated) but then you are looking at $40 for one benchstone, vs $16 for two grey rods. I also find that the rough diamond stone is only needed if you really want to put an entirely new bevel on the blade, which is rarely needed. I would hold of on the diamond stone, until you really feel you need it and go with the cheaper greys first, which will go a long way. Besides, if your Spydie really needs completely a new edge, you can always send it back to Spyderco, and have them put a factory edge on it....for free (+shipping). If you don't like to part with your Spydie for a few weeks, just follow thombrogans instructions......just my two cents.
Edited by - HoB on 5/7/2004 10:40:16 PM
Edited by - HoB on 5/7/2004 10:40:16 PM
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thombrogan
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- samosaurus
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thombrogan
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