Posted: 6/8/2016 11:47:50 AM EDT
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Hello, the wife and kids got me THIS for my birthday this year.
It is the sharpest knife I have ever held. I was wanting to keep it that way. I have always sharpened my own knives but have never put that kind of an edge on anything. Full disclosure, I don't use the best sharpeners. I thought they were working fine, but after handling the Shun, I know that they are sub par. I want to get some nice wet stones, but I don't know anything about them. Some are $30.00 and some are a lot more. Is there a difference, or a brand everyone prefers? I plan on practicing on my old Chicago cutlery knives to get the technique down before I try it on the new knife. Please educate me on which stones to buy, also what would be a nice strop, should I use a strop or a honing steel? any advice is appreciated. I would really like to do this myself and not send my knife in once a year for sharpening. Thanks!!! |
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Quoted:
Hello, the wife and kids got me THIS for my birthday this year. It is the sharpest knife I have ever held. I was wanting to keep it that way. I have always sharpened my own knives but have never put that kind of an edge on anything. Full disclosure, I don't use the best sharpeners. I thought they were working fine, but after handling the Shun, I know that they are sub par. I want to get some nice wet stones, but I don't know anything about them. Some are $30.00 and some are a lot more. Is there a difference, or a brand everyone prefers? I plan on practicing on my old Chicago cutlery knives to get the technique down before I try it on the new knife. Please educate me on which stones to buy, also what would be a nice strop, should I use a strop or a honing steel? any advice is appreciated. I would really like to do this myself and not send my knife in once a year for sharpening. Thanks!!! get a honing steel and you can keep that edge for years to come. If you really must sharpen it, then invest in a wicked edge system. |
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. Lansky Knife Sharpening Kits & Sharpening Systems You can get by with the 3 stone system, but I've had a 5 stone kit for 30 years and never regretted buying the extra stones. You don't need the diamond stones unless you have a nicked up blade and need to remove a lot of material to re-edge. |