Jake, here’s a link to a previous forum thread you might want to read with a video you should watch…
https://knife.wickededgeusa.com/forums/topic/instructional-video-series-on-youtube-finding-the-sweet-spot/#post-57154
There are two things going on you need to learn to deal with.
- Setting the appropriate sharpening angle, and
- clamping the knife in an efficient sharpening position, the "sweet spot", where the stones can contact all of the knife edge's length.
Both of these are related and effect how you can sharpen the edge. The first one is adjusted by the guide rod angle settings and the second is related to the knife's clamped position.
If the stones are not contacting the bevel at the knife’s edge or apex, but it is reaching the bevel lower down, like you are experiencing on just the left side, that’s seems most likely that it’s an angle issue and not a positioning or “sweet spot” issue. If it’s a positioning issue it should affect both sides of the knife the same way at that same place along the edge.
It seems from your description of your sharpening issue that the existing angle on the left side is wider, more obtuse, at the edge than the angle you are trying to sharpen it to. That’s why it’s always a good idea to use the sharpie trick to determine the beginning angle even if you plan on sharpening the knife to a different edge profile. Then, at least you’ll know what angle you’re starting with. This gives you a plan of attack knowing what you’ll be trying to do to it. Sometimes if the angles are very different, both from side to side and what it is to begin with compared to what you want to change it to, you may need to rethink what you’re wanting to do. Sometimes you may need to work with what you have and make the changes gradually over several sharpening sessions. Removing and wasting too much good, usable steel can change the edge profile so much to render a knife too short in height or too thick to be used well.
For the knife you’re sharpening, if you keep at it on the left side where you are not reaching the apex, eventually after removing enough steel from where you are able to make contact, lower down on the bevel, you will catch up towards the edge as your bevel gets taller. But you’ll waste a lot of time, effort and knife edge steel. That is what re-profiling is…changing the angle and shape of the knife edge. You may need to find a balance and work with what you have. It’s not like a bad haircut. It doesn’t grow back.
The clamping blade lean to the left associated with your “standard vise version” for your WE100 model in the Pro Pack 1, means that for any clamped knife the left side is leaning closer to the left side guide rod and right knife side is leaning farther away from the right guide rod by the same amount, given that everything about the knife is symmetrical. That being said you’ll want to adjust the left side set angles (-) the determined offset or determined correction value for that knife and set the right side (+) the offset. If you haven’t yet learned how to determine the lean correction value using 1.5º or 2.0º is a good guesstimate or work around adjustment value, to start with, until you learn how to determine the actual correction value for each knife, you’ll be sharpening.
So, if you’re wanting to sharpen the knife to 20º per side, set the left angle at 18.5º or 18º and the right-side angle at 21.5º or 22º.
Hope this helps and doesn’t seem too complicated.