
The strop block from Knivesplus. I am very impressed so far. My first official stop. Prior to this I have been using cardboard box edges and cereal boxes lol.
I never understood all of this stropping talk, but after I saw a YouTube video of jdavis882 using a strop I was interested. I then found another video of a guy using a usps cardboard box flap as a cheap strop. Then I was told by a board member here to strop on a cereal box. I thought the SM and ending on the UF stone was good. The cardboard strops made a difference and this new Knivesplus strop is freakin amazing. You gotta get one!KardinalSyn wrote:I have yet to use a strop myself. Looks good. Looking forward to more info on its use.
Was just about to order one myself from KnivesPlus. Some sort of bag or case come with it?rg02 wrote:My Dad surprised me today :D with this:
The strop block from Knivesplus. I am very impressed so far. My first official stop. Prior to this I have been using cardboard box edges and cereal boxes lol.
Good for your dad. I had the knivesplus strop and love it. One great thing about it is you never need compound. Just rub some olive oil on it from time to time. My son has it now and uses it all the time. I believe it is the best strop for the money I've seen.rg02 wrote:My Dad surprised me today :D with this:
The strop block from Knivesplus. I am very impressed so far. My first official stop. Prior to this I have been using cardboard box edges and cereal boxes lol.
Kardinal, I understand wanting a lot of info on something before buying. However, in this case I think you should get the knivesplus strop today. It is a very good strop and only costs about $20 I think. I only say this because I am SO SURE about the benefit of strops when used properly. No matter how sharp you are getting your knives now the strop will get them sharper. Of course for a strop to be benificial the knife has to be very sharp already. A strop is a fine tuning tool, NOT to replace stones.KardinalSyn wrote:I have yet to use a strop myself. Looks good. Looking forward to more info on its use.
Funny thing about the strop is it didn't have an advertised grit. From my limited experience I'd say something like 6 micron. I think that strops will differ in texture that makes as much difference as the grit. It's nice though, only needs olive oil to recharge it. I called knivesplus about it a few years ago and some girl told me they have been using the same strop on their bench for a long long time.dbcad wrote:I'm intrigued by this knivesplus strop. What kind of grit does it have? Currently using a Chicago strop with 2u diapaste and my edges come out quite nice especially when I'm in the "groove".
Going to have to look up this strop if I can :)