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  1. #1
    Senior Member dnullify's Avatar
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    Default Another Beginner: When stropping isn't enough? Hones/honing?

    Hey all!

    I have been interested in straight razor shaving for a while now, but have been too intimidated to post here and buy equipment necessary.

    However, a couple weeks ago i was buying my mom a new set of kitchen knives at our local cutlery store. I figured, heck, i'm spending $450 on knives, i may as well ask if they'll give me a deal on the cheapest straight razor. I walked out with a cheap Dovo solingen delrin handle straight razor, and a short Bismarck canvas strop/canvas both for $70.

    I've been self-educating and youtubing, and have been shaving with it for about 2 weeks now, and feel somewhat comfortable with it, though not with the results. I'm 18, but i've received the hairy genes from my mother's side, so my beard is dense and grows annoyingly fast, one of the motivations for switching to straight razors.

    I've been experimenting with technique (pressure, angles, etc), and i have improved somewhat since my first shave. however i am still getting a rather rough and unsatisfactorily close shave. I'm sure some of it is due to technique, which i figure i'll eventually get better at. I'm not sure if my razor is sharp enough.
    I've watched plenty of videos on youtube about stropping technique, and i'm fairly certain i'm doing that well enough (there is always room for improvement.).

    As far as i can tell, my razor fails the hanging hair test miserably. It'll snip a stiffer hair if coaxed, but it doesn't pop with gravity alone as seen on youtube. Would further stropping/better technique/ canvas stropping bring it to as sharp as it needs to be for a better shave?

    I also have powdered Chromium Oxide, Aluminum oxide, and several bench strops (I've got an entire flank of leather, and a 1"x4"x5' in the garage). could i use a loaded strop to take the edge sharper? or would that do more harm than good?

    My mother and brother bought me a pre-shave kit for Christmas from The Art of Shaving, which came with: pre-shave oil, a good sized jar of shaving cream, a badger brush, and after shave balm. I am going to try it out tomorrow, and It seems like a lot of work .

    I am into sharpening my pocket knives, and like to maintain hair-whittle edges on them. recently I've been oogling spyderco's 2x8 F and UF bench stones for a while, for my other knives to replace my makeshift sharpening setup (M, F, UF rods on the base of a sharpmaker, since i do everything freehand now). Are they fine enough, or otherwise suitable to hone a straight razor?
    I don't like the work involved with water stones (soaking, lapping, price), which is why i'm looking at ceramics.

    As i understand it, honing shouldn't be necessary more than a couple times a year, so i'd like to have hones that could serve other purposes. Now i've got christmas money for it, but not a whole lot.

    I welcome any tips or advice you all have,

    -Siddhartha

    thanks for reading!

  2. #2
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    Chances are your Dovo needs a bit more than stropping. At least any Dovo I've seen that came straight from the factory needed it.
    If I were you I'd send the razor out for honing to somebody who's good at it. You can also get another shave-ready razor from such a person, but that'll probably cost you a bit more than honing the one you already have.
    If you insist on figuring it out yourself look at the wiki pages and the honing section on the proper way to hone a razor. I've never used spiderco hones, but other people have. AFIK the way they cut depends a lot on how they're lapped, so that's an extra variable, but generally you would set a bevel on a ~1k grit level hone, then refine the edge on a ~4k grit level and then ~8k grit level, at which point, if everything was done right, it should be pretty good shave.

  3. #3
    Senior Member LAsoxfan's Avatar
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    I've only been around here about 6 weeks, but I've gathered a few tidbits of info. My guess is that your razor was not shave ready when you purchased it. Stropping an unhoned razor is not going to make it shave ready and honing a SR is nothing like honing a knife. Stropping is for maintaining the edge between honings. Your best bet would be to look up one of the many honemeisters here on SRP and have them work their magic on your razor.

    I noticed you commented that the shave prep takes a lot of time. That's one of the reasons many of us have chosen SR shaving. It forces us to slow down and enjoy the shave, in an otherwise hurried world.

  4. #4
    Senior Member dnullify's Avatar
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    So, just because i don't have any other option, i decided to give stropping another try after reading a lot of the wiki.

    I sped up my strokes, and went to about 60. now a head-hair is catching with the weight of gravity alone, instead of just sliding off. my head-hairs are extremely thick, so this might have something to do with it. i feel like the gentleman i bought the razor from might have put an edge on it. he told me he occasionally shaves with a similar dovo himself (though he carries much nicer razors).
    either way, there is definite improvement with brisker and longer stropping, but my hand is cramped up. do you see this going anywhere, or does it definitely need a honing?

    Oh, i do have spyderco Ultra Fine rods for my Sharpmaker. would it be worth a try to hone it with the rods on the flat of the base (as shown on the instructional dvd for straight razors)?
    Last edited by dnullify; 12-28-2010 at 05:08 AM.

  5. #5
    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
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    I would definitely suggest getting it honed by a pro. This way you will know that if there is a problem it isnt the razor. Check the classifieds, there are plenty of people to help you!
    It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain

  6. #6
    Senior Member dnullify's Avatar
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    I'm a little reluctant. while i see the benefits of having someone touch up the razor, who knows what they're doing, it is a $30 task, which is half what i payed for the razor in the first place, and half the cost of a 3x8 UF or 1/3 of a norton.

  7. #7
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dnullify View Post
    I'm a little reluctant. while i see the benefits of having someone touch up the razor, who knows what they're doing, it is a $30 task, which is half what i payed for the razor in the first place, and half the cost of a 3x8 UF or 1/3 of a norton.
    Yes, you're paying mostly for the skill, and much less for the equipment, although if you want to, your razor probably can be finished on a $500 rock. As I said, do some reading, try it yourself, and if you're happy with the results you've saved yourself $30. May be if you stick with that, at some point in the future you'll experience another edge and you'll either be glad you saved your $30 or feel really stupid for cheaping out, there's no way to tell at this point.

    Everybody who has gone through the process will tell you that you're better off spending the money, but at the end of the day it's your decision and your face.

  8. #8
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    I also have powdered Chromium Oxide, Aluminum oxide, and several bench strops (I've got an entire flank of leather, and a 1"x4"x5' in the garage). could i use a loaded strop to take the edge sharper? or would that do more harm than good?
    You're resisting the suggestions to send the razor to someone else. I can understand that kind of pig-headedness.<g> You _can_ develop the skills you need to get the blade sharp yourself.

    A purist would avoid CrOx, and hone on progressively finer stones until the edge was "shave ready". We're not all purists.

    The deal with loaded ("pasted", we call them) strops:

    1. Yes, if an edge is almost right, a CrOx-pasted strop may bring it all the way to "shave-ready". I suspect that it's the _cheapest_ way to turn an "almost-shave-ready" edge into a "shave-ready" edge.

    2. The disadvantage of that operation is that the edge will have two angles on it (it'll have a "compound bevel") -- one set by the honing stones, and another one (at the very tip) set by the CrOx pasted strop. The lighter the pressure you use on the pasted strop, the closer that secondary bevel will be to the main (hone-set) bevel.

    After CrOx has done its job, you should strop on plain leather (for many shaves) until the edge begins to dull once more. Then use the CrOx strop again.

    Eventually, the CrOx strop won't bring the edge back. _Then_ you need to hone on a rigid surface -- a stone -- to get back to a single bevel.

    One source for this technique:

    http://www.whippeddog.com/upld/Strai...ing_Manual.pdf

    See the section on "Abrasive Stropping".

    And another thread from this site:

    http://straightrazorpalace.com/strop...xperiment.html

    There's also material in the Wiki on pasted strops.

    Charles
    Last edited by cpcohen1945; 12-28-2010 at 07:07 AM.

  9. #9
    Senior Member dnullify's Avatar
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    I'm going to see if there are any services available locally that know what they're doing. I live in the bay area, CA; there is bound to be one.

    I have experience in sharpening, polishing, and refining edges of knives, so i figured i'd give it a shot learning to hone straight razors. since i want to get a finishing hone anyway, and it's not a particularly expensive razor i'd give it a shot myself. if i fudge it up, i guess i have no choice but to send it out.


    Quote Originally Posted by cpcohen1945 View Post
    You're resisting the suggestions to send the razor to someone else. I can understand that kind of pig-headedness.<g> You _can_ develop the skills you need to get the blade sharp yourself.

    A purist would avoid CrOx, and hone on progressively finer stones until the edge was "shave ready". We're not all purists.

    The deal with loaded ("pasted", we call them) strops:

    1. Yes, if an edge is almost right, a CrOx-pasted strop may bring it all the way to "shave-ready". I suspect that it's the _cheapest_ way to turn an "almost-shave-ready" edge into a "shave-ready" edge.

    2. The disadvantage of that operation is that the edge will have two angles on it (it'll have a "compound bevel") -- one set by the honing stones, and another one (at the very tip) set by the CrOx pasted strop. The lighter the pressure you use on the pasted strop, the closer that secondary bevel will be to the main (hone-set) bevel.

    After CrOx has done its job, you should strop on plain leather (for many shaves) until the edge begins to dull once more. Then use the CrOx strop again.

    Eventually, the CrOx strop won't bring the edge back. _Then_ you need to hone on a rigid surface -- a stone -- to get back to a single bevel.

    One source for this technique:

    http://www.whippeddog.com/upld/Strai...ing_Manual.pdf

    See the section on "Abrasive Stropping".

    There's also material in the Wiki on pasted strops.

    Charles
    thanks for the info. i think i'll stay away from CrOx for now...
    What exactly does news paper do?

  10. #10
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dnullify View Post
    What exactly does news paper do?
    Depends on the newspaper, or to be more precise on the ink. In the days of old it contained iron oxide as a pigment, so that abrades steel at a reasonably fast rate.

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