Here's my setup for quick reprofiling of heavily damaged knives, or for convexing. The BGM-100 + FVB combo is admittedly more expensive than the cheap, small belt sander, but it does the job. For large knives, I use the larger USB.
IMG_8467.jpg
Cheers,
Nick.
Great idea! I use the same machine with leather belts for deburring and honing. That system depends on one's ability to hold a blade perfectly level, which is not so easy if you're trying to hold an angle with less than 1° variation.
Definitely, I'd even say that whatever slack is in the belt will make for a deviation of more than 1°, especially with the non-stiff belts. However this setup allows for greatly increasing the consistency compared to using it handheld: the edge remains more easily in the same place on the belt, and according to an eyeballed measurement with an anglecube the jig shaft remains horizontal well within a degree.
Aside from very specific cases (blades that need to be convexed, or if I have like 5 minutes to get a blunt piece of steel to 15-18 dps around 100 BESS), I set the angle @-1.5dps compared to my target edgle angle and finish the knives up on the Tormek using the standard SG + leather honing wheel with PA-70 routine. I quickly get a burr on the Tormek this way, and the microscope does not show a significant secondary bevel, so the apex angle is about right.
And my favorite option for honing with this setup is ... the leather belt with PA-70. I found that with the micro-mesh belts on standard stainless steel knives I would end up with a foil edge that gets folded from side to side and not really cut. The fabric belts with PA-70 or diamond spray work quite well too.
The next step is to add a vacuum table because there quite a lot of metal dust flying around, especially when doing heavy-duty reshaping (repairing broken blades, heavy thinning, etc.).
I also use PA-70 with leather belts. Perfect for kitchen knives and low-carbide folding knives. For wear-resistant steels I start with a leather belt using 2 micron or .5 micron diamond and then finish with PA-70. But I almost always sharpen on the Tormek first. With CBN or diamond wheels I find it to be just as fast as the Worksharp, with better results and no chance of overheating.
Interesting.
Like 3D, for low end knives I generally set an edge on the T8 and hone on leather with Tormek paste on the WSKO. It's always a bit of guess work to find correct honing angle on the belt, especially taking into consideration the taper of the blade.
I guess this set up could take out some guesswork but I'm wondering how you set the angle here?
Are you setting the belt at a particular angle and ensuring the usb is set so that the tip of the blade is hitting perpendicular?
Or somehow using a calculator?
Some clarification would be handy. Thanks.
I recently started using a Sharpie to confirm the right honing angle with the WS, which was illuminating. Seems I'm pretty good at nailing it on my right side, but what *looks* to be horizontal on my left side is actually a degree or two too shallow. Now that I know that I can compensate and I get a more consistent result. Lord knows why I waited so long to try this. :-\
Quote from: Sir Amwell on March 28, 2023, 12:25:40 AMInteresting.
Like 3D, for low end knives I generally set an edge on the T8 and hone on leather with Tormek paste on the WSKO. It's always a bit of guess work to find correct honing angle on the belt, especially taking into consideration the taper of the blade.
I guess this set up could take out some guesswork but I'm wondering how you set the angle here?
Are you setting the belt at a particular angle and ensuring the usb is set so that the tip of the blade is hitting perpendicular?
Or somehow using a calculator?
Some clarification would be handy. Thanks.
I use an anglecube twice, referenced to the horizontal surface you're supposed to lay your knife on :
- once to set the angle between horizontal and the pulleys (the angle indicated by the dial is rather consistent with the measure). I set it @-1.5 target dps because that's what seems to compensate for the slack in the stiff belts, and I don't mind the increased angle for honing on more flexible belts
- a second time, after I've set up the blade in the jig and the position where it will contact the belt. I put it on the blade if I can (and average the top and bottom measurements), or on a block on the shaft of the jig if I can't. The goal being to have a 0° angle this time.
Quote from: 3D Anvil on March 28, 2023, 12:59:06 AMI recently started using a Sharpie to confirm the right honing angle with the WS, which was illuminating. Seems I'm pretty good at nailing it on my right side, but what *looks* to be horizontal on my left side is actually a degree or two too shallow. Now that I know that I can compensate and I get a more consistent result. Lord knows why I waited so long to try this. :-\
I found - using a sharpie as well - that I had both the tendency you describe and a proneness to twisting my wrist slightly on long, curved blades. The BGM/FVB/USB setup allows me to consistently get sub-100 BESS which didn't happen before.
FWIW, someone made a 3D file of a horizontal surface that you can mount right next to the belt...
BGA guide.png
https://cults3d.com/en/3d-model/tool/work-sharp-ken-onion-blade-grinder-riser-2-5-with-slider-thinner-potranko28-2
The tool rest idea is pretty clever. I need to get me a 3D printer.