Hey all, so my brand new WE stuff arrived last week (huge thanks to Bob at Oldawan for the excellent customer service) and I’ve been having a lot of fun sharpening knives, everything works great.
I’ve got the 50/80 grit stones and I was watching them cut through metal thinking “I’d better be careful not to slip my finger down one by accident while applying pressure” when later on, while washing the stone I did just that by mistake.
It didn’t hurt much. So I did it again deliberately. Still nothing. I thought it might be because it was wet, so when it was dry I did it again. Same result.
So (and this is where I should say nobody should try this at home, I’m stupid and did this because I’m a curious idiot) I picked up the stone and scrubbed a bit of the skin on my hand with it. Still no real result. And remember this is the 50 grit stone, that shaves metal off a blade very fast.
So then I started applying what I would call medium pressure, about the same as I had been using on the knives. I scrubbed up and down on my skin at least twenty times, maybe more. thinking back to how the stone cuts through metal it ought to have left a red/raw patch on my skin, but it didn’t. Skin felt perfectly fine.
At this point I wondered if it’s because skin is soft and flows around the stone instead of resisting, so I tried to file one of my fingernails on the stone. It did file a bit, but no faster than a normal metal nail file.
So then I picked up an empty aluminium drink can and had a go on that. After about twenty medium-pressure strokes it was only just starting to scratch the paint off.
Now don’t get me wrong, I’m very happy with the stone, it does exactly what I want it to when it comes to knife sharpening. I just don’t understand how a diamond surface that cuts through metal so well can have such a seemingly reduced effect on other surfaces. What gives? Can anyone explain what’s going on here?
Sorry for the slightly leftfield, non-sharpening-related question, but I’m naturally curious and hope someone can shed some light on it.