I must have tried this at some point, 'cause I have some Flitz polish in my drawer of sharpening stuff, although I don’t remember… :S
A quick internet search showed lots apparently have. A couple of posts of interest I found… one said he contacted the company and was told the abrasive was AO at 3-3.5 microns. A couple of posts in a straight razor forum said they found the abrasive seemed to break down rather quickly… one post said the finish after a bit of use compared to a .5m paste he had.
Another polish compound I recall some using was a Meguiar’s polish that smelled like cinnamon (Meguiar’s Hot Rim polish according to the 'net)… never tried it myself.
Thanks. I have an old piece of leather. I might mount it and try it with the FLITZ. I have some old knives that are carbon steel. They were junkers that were someones throw-aways at a garage sale. I think I’ll try to strop the entire blade side to clean it up then onto the WEPS for an edge and back on the FLITZ STROP.
It’s probably worth a try. I use a lot of Flitz for small parts polishing in the shop and it does a very nice job for those times I don’t want to hit the buffing wheel or have a teeny tiny part to get at. If I had some spare WEPS strops I would be tempted to try it and see. Sometimes not having extra equipment laying around is a good thing, I’d get too distracted experimenting!
I can definitely confirm it breaks down fast, however. I tend to use a felt bob on either a small dremel stylus or the foredom motor depending on where I’m working. It’s a very, very light polish if you let it soak into felt, whereas the normal dry polish compound I use on the felt wheels/bobs gets the job done relatively quickly. Flitz seems to work MUCH better while still wet, but of course soaking it into a felt bob and spinning it up makes a mess
Above results are on par with my own testing I did earlier tonight on the flat side of a blade sanded to 3000 grit with wet/dry. I was trying to get the fine scratches left after hitting it on a 6in buffing wheel with medium grade compound(SCR I think)…Searching for that elusive mirror polished blade.
I used a dremmel with the tiny buffing wheels for my testing with flitz and the 5u diamond paste(tan). The flitz took out some of the finer scratches, broke down quickly, but left a nice overall shine. The 5u paste seemed to be working but heavier scratches remained, same as with the Flitz, only difference seemed to be no higher gloss shine after I cleaned the blade with rubbing alcohol.
Also agreeing with ApexGS regarding the wet Flitz. Messy but works better, suspect something chemically is going on with it by the smell. I have applied it to a strop for buffing the bevel but once dry…the magic is gone. lol
I hope to photograph whats going on at the blade with different polishes to really determine progression for scratch removal once I get some magnification.