Not sure if you’re talking about the same thing, but I have a lot of blades I’ve hand-sharpened over the years and inadvertently converted the bevel from a flat one to a complex, faceted, convex one.
My practice, for now (still a beginner myself with a few dozen blades under my belt) , is to select what seems like a good bevel angle for the purpose of the knife, EDC, kitchen, butcher, etc. If I can discover it, I’ll use the manufacturer’s suggested angle. I then use the Sharpie trick for “finding the sweet spot”, but instead of looking to remove the Sharpie evenly from heel to tip (impossible before restoring a flat bevel), I look to have a nice, shiny line right in the middle of the convex bevel. In other words, the area where the Sharpie is removed will be equidistant from the edge and the shoulder of the rounded bevel.
Now when I lay down the new, flat bevel, it should be uniform from heel to tip of the blade.
Hope that makes sense and helps!
-
This reply was modified 2 years, 10 months ago by Timm.
-
This reply was modified 2 years, 10 months ago by Timm.