I thought it was a great thread, but with it being ~120 pages maybe starting a part 2 would facilitate easier searching.
Here's my latest purchase. 80 grit flattening plate, and a combination 400/1,000 grit plate, both $30 a piece from chefknivestogo.

I haven't had a need to use the 80 grit plate yet but I'm excited to. Their 140 grit flattening plate has been my go to reprofiling stone for a long time. If I'm not using my belt sander to reprofile, the CKTG diamond plates are my first choice.
The combo stone I've used a few times. I figured the 400 grit side would be good for coarse edged pocket knives etc., and the 1,000 would be good for culinary knives and more polished pocket knife edges. So far it seems to fill those roles well, but it needs more time to break in on the 1,000 grit side for the best results.
https://www.chefknivestogo.com/search-r ... esc&page=1
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A while ago I also ordered some silicon carbide grit from CKTG, meant for flattening stones. As I don't really use stones that need flattening aside from a shapton 5k kuromaku, the plan was to use these on sharpmaker rods.

I finally got around to trying it out.
I have to say, for me this is a game changer.
While sharpmaker rods wear incredibly slowly, they do wear over time.
I bought a sharpmaker, then after five years bought a replacement set of both rods. Then I did the same thing five years later. Picked up a second sharpmaker ~20 years after getting the first.
Each time I noticed the same thing. The old rods felt much smoother to the touch, and they left a much more polished edge than the new ones.
My oldest brown rods leave a finish closer to new whites than new browns.
So I was hoping with a sheet of glass and some loose grit, I could bring them back to factory new aggression.
Taking it one step further, I hoped I'd be able to make a set of brown rods feel even coarser than a new set. I love the sharpmaker rods but always wanted something in between the diamond rods and brown rods for a finishing step on medium grit finished edges.
This did exactly what I hoped. I got a few grits of silicone carbide ranging from 80 to 320. The 80 brought the mediums down to a rougher feel than my newest set, just like I had hoped.
I'm really glad I held on to the old sets of rods, even though I stopped using them each time I got a new set. Now I'm going to have a wider variety of options when using my sharpmaker, ranging from diamond rods, to extra coarse finished mediums, regular mediums and fines, up to ultrafines.
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One last tidbit. Recently made a fairly long post with some general sharpening tips, someone reading this may find it helpful.