Thanks Leo for your response and just to be sure I understand you correctly you are saying that you hand strop for maintenance. However, if you wanted to use the WEPS then would most likely only strop the 16 degree bevel.
Yes I hand strop…it is something I feel comfortable with, it is fast to use in my congested home and it keep the convex edges super sharp in a trice.
The strops of the WEPS would be even better I suspect if one used the progressively finer pastes available, but we must check with Clay or Tom of Jende Industries to verify what would be the correct angle setting…I suspect 16 degrees in the example I gave but that needs to be verified by one of our experts. Until then I will use the hand strop, anyway it is an old friend of mine and it does an excellent job for this old sharpening pragmatist!![]()
Cheers
Leo
I’m no expert but what I do is the cutting edge using my highest stone, 1600 ceramic, very lightly just to feel the slightest bur, one side then other, then some passes with paste and spray.
than drop to the lowest, say 17 for me, and since the 17-19 convex has been polished from the original convex, I just do same paste and spray to round off the 20 to 19 edge.
I hope it makes sense .. it does in my head as the only real use is the 20 edge.
It works for me on most, except as from my original post on convex, my VG10 Endura no matter what stay a bit toothy.
Maybe just that batch of metal, who knows. Sharp as all hell but no hair splitting or whittling.
Hi Ziggy
Experimentation is the way to go! I will say it again, IMHO there is more than one way to get a knife sharp enough to bring a smile to your face. My knives come out freakin’ sharp and so I am happy! Whatever works is my motto! Good stuff mate!
Regards
Leo
When touching up a convex edge on the WEPS, I’m not sure what Clay recommends, but I recommend only using the highest grit paddle set at the highest angle you convexed with (i.e., 3.5 micron diamond paste @ 20 degrees). Several very light, alternating strokes should bring back a tired edge without altering the convexity too much. You can do this as long as you feel the resulting touched up edge is satisfactory.
If your edge needs a little more work, you can go down a grit level (5 micron paste @ 20 degrees). If that isn’t working, then you have two choices: one is to convex again from the lower angle to the higher angle with the finer pastes and leather paddles (this should be done first, and if you go back to the 14 or 10 micron paste, the edge should be renewed indefinitely this way), or go back to the ceramics/diamond plates/stones to redo the convex profile altogether (better reserved for removing chips, etc.).
I always maintain the edge by stropping one or two degrees behind the cutting edge angle to allow the pliable leather to conform to the curve without applying pressure to the edge itself. A couple feather-light strokes at the actual cutting edge to polish it off seems to do the trick. As Tom has said, it’s important to use a very light touch on the actual cutting edge angle to avoid further widening of the edge.
I tried all three methods for obtaining a convex mentioned in this thread (from high angle to low angle, from low angle to high angle, first low angle then high angle then in between). I made photographs of the knives using a microscope for each method to be able to see the differences between the methods. Guess what… I cannot see any difference, neither with the naked eye, nor with a microscope
.
In fact, it was very difficult to distinguish the four different edge bevels I created on each knife before stropping, let alone to compare them.
So here’s just one set of pictures, of a 12C27 pocket knife at each stage in the sharpening process. I made a convex edge from 18 to 21 degrees. All pictures were taken with a Veho 400x magnification microscope.
First, the 100 grit stone at 18 degrees, in order to obtain a burr. This took the longest:

You may wonder how I held the knife in all of the pictures. In fact it is in the WEPS vice all the time. However, the microscope is round and I forgot where “up” is
. Then the 200 grit stone:

400 grit:

600 grit. Looking much better already:

800 grit:

1000 grit. The edge is starting to look civilized:

1200 grit

1600 grit. The final lowest angle bevel at 18 degrees.

Then I added a second bevel at 21 degrees. At first I used a 1600 grit stone. However, when I saw no second bevel appear, I switched to 1200 grit before going to 1600 grit again. I probably shouldn’t have done this, since I removed slightly too much material:

It is perhaps easier to see at a 20x magnification:

Then a third bevel at 20 degrees. I did about 50 light push movements per side of the blade with the 1600 grit stone:

Finally a fourth bevel at 19 degrees. It was hard to make a photograph actually showing all four bevels, but with some effort you can see them:

Then on to stropping. I first did about 50 passes per side of the blade at 19 degrees using 5 micron paste on a leather strop. Then I did 50 again at 20 degrees using 3.5 micron paste. The final result:

And I got very similar results with the two other methods.
Indeed
. And the proof of the pudding is in the eating.
Good stuff my friend! Excellent results yes? :woohoo:
Indeed there are many paths to enlightenment and you have shown some here. Well done mate!
Leo
Great job Mark.
Amazingly informative!
Finally it should be mentioned, that if you have any bevel edge and you frequently use a strop on it as I do a lot, you will gradually end up with a convex edge as the shoulders becomes rounded and the traditional bullet geometry is formed…it is like using a very slow sandpapering.
Cheers
Leo
my new blogI just tried out different methods for creating a convex edge more extensively and made more and better pictures of it. You can read all about it and see the pictures on .
My conclusion: all methods work, but the method of setting edges from most acute one to least acute one removes most material and takes the longest. I prefer the method Clay has shown in some videos: a full edge at the lowest angle (e.g, 16 degrees), followed by a full edge at the highest angle bevel (e.g., 22 degrees), followed by the intermediate bevels (e.g., 20 and 18 degrees), followed by stropping.
I just put a nice convex shoulder on my Chambriard Le Trappeur gentleman’s knife and added a 16.5 degree micro bevel…the paper slices like it is being cut by a laser. The paper appears to literally disappear in front of the approaching edge with almost nil pressure…the molecules seem to jump out of the way on their own. LOL! I shaved some hair off my face with no pull whatsoever…scary doing that…hat off to Tom who shaved his whole face with a cleaver.
Now that is my kind of edge! I used all the diamond paddles plus the ceramic hones and then the leather strops with diamond pastes.
Next I will try this doing it all with the Naniwa Chosera water stones. I can’t picture anything much sharper than this but we shall see.
Leo
[quote quote=“leomitch” post=2395]I just put a nice convex shoulder on my Chambriard Le Trappeur gentleman’s knife and added a 16.5 degree micro bevel…the paper slices like it is being cut by a laser. The paper appears to literally disappear in front of the approaching edge with almost nil pressure…the molecules seem to jump out of the way on their own. LOL! I shaved some hair off my face with no pull whatsoever…scary doing that…hat off to Tom who shaved his whole face with a cleaver.
Now that is my kind of edge! I used all the diamond paddles plus the ceramic hones and then the leather strops with diamond pastes.
Next I will try this doing it all with the Naniwa Chosera water stones. I can’t picture anything much sharper than this but we shall see.
Leo[/quote]
Awesome Leo, I’d love to see a picture if you get around to it.
[quote quote=“leomitch” post=2395]I just put a nice convex shoulder on my Chambriard Le Trappeur gentleman’s knife and added a 16.5 degree micro bevel…the paper slices like it is being cut by a laser. The paper appears to literally disappear in front of the approaching edge with almost nil pressure…the molecules seem to jump out of the way on their own. LOL! I shaved some hair off my face with no pull whatsoever…scary doing that…hat off to Tom who shaved his whole face with a cleaver.
[/quote]
Love that! I still plan on shaving my face with my Fallkniven A1 :woohoo:.
Sorry Clay,but I don’t have a microscope. I suppose I could try a video showing the knife cutting paper in sweeping curves and maybe shaving some hair, but the edge would not show well. Perhaps I will try to chronicle the next edge with the Chosera stones with a video or series of stills. I shall try that.
Thanks to you for confirming that a convex edge with a small micro bevel is a good way to go.
Leo ![]()