Hunting Washington Forum
Equipment & Gear => All Other Gear => Topic started by: Shadow Cat on August 12, 2007, 12:43:24 AM
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I have been using the Lansky sharpening system for years. It may take some time to get that first edge but maintaining it is easy after that. When I am done sharpening a knife, I can shave with it and my blades usually hold a great edge for a long time. A lot of that is decided by the steel used in the blade and the angle used for the edge. I usually use a 20 degree angle so it holds an edge longer.
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I have a really old crock stick sharpening system, two ceramic rods wood block...maybe 20 years old. Works great. The rods aren't very coarse, feel smooth to the touch. Takes a while to get a sharp blade, but when you get there, very easy to maintain. I am surprised that I have not broken it yet...I keep it on the counter as I fillet fish or cut meat, and can keep knives very sharp easily.
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well, I think I can accurately discribe myself as a recovering knife/sharpener junky. I have a lansky and it works great, but for field use I have a speedy sharp and a mini dmt stone. I have never seen a sharpener work better than the speedy. you can honestly turn a butter knife into a butcher knife in 30 seconds. the dmt is just in case you want to get stupid sharp or roll an edge.
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Wet stone works for me.
I have a knife I bought at show once that is chrome steel. Anybody got any ideas. The guy told me ceramic works or the best thing is the inside of the lid off the back of my toilet. Honestly haven't tried that.
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Lansky and my blades are SHARP.
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Wet stone works for me.
I have a knife I bought at show once that is chrome steel. Anybody got any ideas. The guy told me ceramic works or the best thing is the inside of the lid off the back of my toilet. Honestly haven't tried that.
the only thing a speedy sharp won't sharpen is a boker ceramic. it will get it sharp. you may want to finish with a diamond stone....never tried a chrome knife but have cut just about every other steel/alloy made
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Gatco's version of Lansky's. I love that thing. In fact I brought it into work today so a buddy could sharpen one of his knifes later tonight.
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Japanese Water Stones....
First used them for my wood chisels. Sharpened the beveled edge at 25* with a Veritas Guide, till they were shiny as a mirror, then would do the back to clean up the factory grind....they are beyond sharp.
Started doing the same thing with my knives over 10 years ago, and boy are they scary sharp.
Like a rifle with a light trigger, you warn folks before you let them pick 'em up. If you try to shave with them, they won't only remove hair, they will remove any moles that stick up a bit from the skin. Think I'm kiddin? Try a water stone, and work up to 8000.
I can gut/skin/butcher two deer and not need a trip to the stone, just a touch up with the steel every once and a while.
I'd say it works great.....but hell, I ain't nobody. ;)
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Lansky.... and an EZ Lap.
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Lansky, I never could get my knives sharp enough using gramps wetstones.