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Old 07-04-2008, 10:33 PM   #1 (permalink)
JoshEarl
 
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Default Another review of one of Old_School's Japanese naturals

After reading all the rave reviews about Old_School's natural hones, I finally decided to break down and try one out. I need to give some background before we delve into the review.

I don't exactly have HAD, but I have been on a mission to find THE perfect hone for me. Thus far in my quest, I've found that I always have to sacrifice something with any given sharpening strategy. My skin is sensitive and my beard is coarse, so striking a balance is difficult. My skin prefers duller edges, such as what you'd get from a medium barber hone, the Belgian blue hone, or the 8K Norton. My beard laughs at these edges, though. It is barely fazed by anything short of a wicked chromium oxide edge. So most of the time I go for a less-than-close shave to keep my skin happy.

My best results so far have come from pasted hanging strops, but I've always felt like pasted strops were "cheating," somehow, and hence my quest for the perfect hone.

I had high hopes when I ordered this hone from O_S, even though he told me it was a little on the soft side.

The hone arrived on Monday. As you can see, it has the rough-hewn appearance typical of Japanese naturals. It's like someone walked up to a cliff, whacked it with a hammer to break off a chunk, and flattened one side. I love how each of these hones is totally unique. This one is about 2.5" wide and 6" or 7" long.

The honing surface was very smooth and polished, so I decided not to bother trying to lap it. My experience with natural hones is that lapping is less critical than with artificial stones. (My Belgian blue developes a 1/16" dip in the middle between lappings, and it doesn't make a bit of difference.) The edges were chamfered slightly, so I was good to go.

I first tested the hone on a Wapienica razor that Joe Chandler had customized for me last year. I haven't used this razor much lately because I was having a hard time getting it to take a good edge off my coticule.

The hone is every bit as nice to use as others have reported. The razor glides right over the surface with very little sensation of cutting. On a Norton 8K, there's a sticky feeling as the hone bites into the steel, but this felt a little like velvety glass. It makes it easy to keep the pressure light and even.

Since this stone is softer, it creates a very thin slurry as I use it. I mist the hone with water from a spray bottle during honing. The stone is also porous, so the water soaks in and makes it change color a bit. Cool.

I did about 100 laps with the Wapi just to be sure I was getting the full benefit of the hone. The razor had previously been honed on a Norton and finished on a coticule.

After about 50 laps, I tested the edge on my arm hair, and my jaw dropped. My arm hair is wispy thin, and I've never been able to get any razor to pop the hairs above skin level. This one was doing just that! I could cut the hairs about 1/16" above my skin without difficulty.

The shave test was phenominal. It was the nicest hone-created edge I've ever used, sharp and smooth without being prone to cause irritation.

I've honed about a half-dozen razors on it, and all have taken the same amazing edge. One brand I've always struggled with a bit was Theirs Isaard. I've honed maybe six to 10 of them, and I was never quite happy with the edges I got. This hone handles them beautifully, though.

A few observations on using this particular hone:
  • I don't find that I need a huge line-up of fine-grit hones to get great edges. It cuts quickly enough that you could go from a 4K to 8K hone without a lot of intermediate steps. Inserting more hones won't hurt, but it's not the case that you need a perfect 10K edge or this hone is worthless.
  • I am going straight from the 4-6K Belgian blue to this Japanese hone. The Japanese hone has basically replaced the coticule in my progression. I go from the DMT 1200 to the Belgian blue to the Japanese. I'm sure I could get away with doing fewer strokes if I stuck another hone or two in there, but it's hardly necessary.
  • The Belgian blue leaves a really nice edge that compliments this hone wonderfully. I am thinking of getting some lower-grit natural Japanese hones like the ones Randy has been talking about.
  • Like other naturals, this hone doesn't have a tendency to overhone. It polishes to a certain point and then things just level out.
  • I was surprised by how not polished the bevel was after using this hone. The coticule and even the Norton 8K leave a pretty shiny bevel, but this hone leaves the bevel looking cloudy to the naked eye. I am pretty sure I can even see the scratch marks without magnification. Still more indication that scratch marks don't tell the whole story.

My tentative conclusion is that I have found the ultimate hone for me. Unless maybe I decide to get one of O_S's top-of-the-line hones...

Josh
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Last edited by JoshEarl; 07-04-2008 at 10:35 PM.
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