Free: Contests & Raffles.
So...Montec G5.......shot a couple for practice and want to touch up the edge. What do you guys use? I looked online and the official just looks like a flat honing surface. Would any flat surfaced wet stone be pretty much the same thing?
To sharpen a montec, shoot it in the bank a few times and it will most likely be sharper I would think a flat stone/diamond would give a less than desirable blade angle.
yeah, just a stone will work fine. just did some last week! the montecs i have were not honed on a stone prior to leaving the factory. you can see the striations from them being sharpened 90 degrees to the direction of travel, creating micro serrations on the blade. when i resharpen, i run the blade with the direction of travel and use a medium-then-fine stone to remove those factory serrations, creating a much smoother edge. now we can begin the debate for which is sharper, micro-serrated or highly polished edge a serrated edge creates a slightly more ragged cut, and perhaps cuts better than the polished edge that make clean slices. some make the case that the slightly ragged hole will not close up or heal as well as the slice created by a polished edge. but a polished edge slices with less effort... so it's kind of a pick-your-poison scenario RadSav probably has more detailed information and opinions than i
Quote from: 724wd on September 16, 2013, 04:55:54 PMyeah, just a stone will work fine. just did some last week! the montecs i have were not honed on a stone prior to leaving the factory. you can see the striations from them being sharpened 90 degrees to the direction of travel, creating micro serrations on the blade. when i resharpen, i run the blade with the direction of travel and use a medium-then-fine stone to remove those factory serrations, creating a much smoother edge. now we can begin the debate for which is sharper, micro-serrated or highly polished edge a serrated edge creates a slightly more ragged cut, and perhaps cuts better than the polished edge that make clean slices. some make the case that the slightly ragged hole will not close up or heal as well as the slice created by a polished edge. but a polished edge slices with less effort... so it's kind of a pick-your-poison scenario RadSav probably has more detailed information and opinions than iNot speaking for RadSav but, he has told me that slick blades do the trick better than serrated. Serrated blade cuts can close up easier, like a zipper where slick blades cut is like trying to patch a hose that's running by putting 2 clean cut pieces back together. It's just going to slip and slide while the blood continues to pump.If I recall correctly anyway.