I don’t know enough about the stones to know whether they are wearing quicker than I expected or just nicely broken in, especially the 100 grit. Ive sharpened perhaps 50 knives, one or two needed lots of time with the 100 grit (3 very hard stainless steel kitchen knives).
I’ve also used the curved ceramic stones and they seem to loose lots of ceramic in the powder that comes off - very different than the Spyderco ceramic rods which shed nothing).
[quote quote=“Dmlevitt” post=1737]I don’t know enough about the stones to know whether they are wearing quicker than I expected or just nicely broken in, especially the 100 grit. Ive sharpened perhaps 50 knives, one or two needed lots of time with the 100 grit (3 very hard stainless steel kitchen knives).
I’ve also used the curved ceramic stones and they seem to loose lots of ceramic in the powder that comes off - very different than the Spyderco ceramic rods which shed nothing).
Thanks[/quote]
Nice Edge! The diamond stones should last much, much longer than 50 knives. The set I’m using has done many hundreds. You might try cleaning them really well under running water with a nylon or gentle wire brush with some dish soap. The curved stones do shed a lot. Using them a little wet works well. Coorstek (that make the Spyderco stones and rods) is going to be making some ceramics for us soon.
It is turning a bit off-topic, but I clean my ceramic stones simply in a dish washer. It was a tip Sal Glesser gave in his Sharpmaker instruction video and it works great. I clean my diamond stones with a nylon brush and simple dish soap, like Clay.
But I wondered, would putting the diamond stones in the dish washer not work as well? They need less cleaning than the ceramic stones. Or would the abrasives in the dish washer do something nasty to the diamond stones? (Difficult to imagine, since diamond is a lot harder.) Or am I overseeing something?
I think the heat of the dishwasher would likely cause more damage - it could cause the adhesive to come lose between the plate and the paddle and possibly warp the paddle.
For cleaning the diamonds and the ceramics all I use is an old toothbrush and some liquid soap. Real high tech, I know :lol:
I’m not sure how many factories coorstek has, but I work across the street basically from the one in Hillsboro, OR. And actually went to a fire they had last year.
We’re working with Coorstek to introduce some extremely fine ceramics. Their lead time is 8-12 weeks, so we’re looking at the end of April for the first batch.
We’re working with Coorstek to introduce some extremely fine ceramics. Their lead time is 8-12 weeks, so we’re looking at the end of April for the first batch.[/quote]
Great news Clay! It’s fine that you are keeping improving Wicked Edge. I just found that you quietly added 1 and 0.5 Micron Diamond Strop Pack. What is the comparison with diamond sprays of the same grit size? And why you didn’t add 1/0.5 micron diamond paste refils?