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In the Shop => General Tormek Questions => Topic started by: dadinthegarageww on February 27, 2022, 06:45:54 PM

Title: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: dadinthegarageww on February 27, 2022, 06:45:54 PM
Sorry guys, it's me again...

Was sharpening one more kitchen knife when it slipped and dug into the stone.  My heart sank,  but at least my fingers are OK. 

What do I do now? Use the grit stone or true up the stone once again?

On a side note,  how often do you guys true your stone? My machine is less than a week old,  I've already trued it up to between 250 and 245. Not sure what I did,  but after sharpening the chisel,  one side was quite used up. I thought I had consistently used the stone,  apparently not...
Title: Re: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: cbwx34 on February 27, 2022, 07:06:03 PM
Quote from: dadinthegarageww on February 27, 2022, 06:45:54 PM
Sorry guys, it's me again...

Was sharpening one more kitchen knife when it slipped and dug into the stone.  My heart sank,  but at least my fingers are OK. 

What do I do now? Use the grit stone or true up the stone once again?

On a side note,  how often do you guys true your stone? My machine is less than a week old,  I've already trued it up to between 250 and 245. Not sure what I did,  but after sharpening the chisel,  one side was quite used up. I thought I had consistently used the stone,  apparently not...

I would try the grading stone first... doesn't look that bad.  You might also consider slightly rounding the edges of the wheel.

My .02 on the 2nd question... I think you're just in the learning phase, as your experience grows, you'll need to true less.
Title: Re: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: dadinthegarageww on February 27, 2022, 08:30:15 PM
Thank you! I'll try the stone first and report back!
Title: Re: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: highpower on February 27, 2022, 09:03:50 PM
Quote from: cbwx34 on February 27, 2022, 07:06:03 PM
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I would try the grading stone first... doesn't look that bad.  You might also consider slightly rounding the edges of the wheel.


I was going to say the same thing. The edges on the wheel look mighty sharp to me as well. In the Tormek sharpening videos they often stress it's a good idea to round over the edges of the stone slightly (especially for new users) in order to help prevent this exact situation. I think cb is spot on here.
Title: Re: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: dadinthegarageww on February 28, 2022, 01:15:14 PM
I don't think the blade caught the wheel because of a square edge. I think what happened was that I let loose a bit and since the stone was rotating towards the edge, it pulled the blade with it. That is when it dug in.

You're correct, I did cut myself not eh side of the wheels last night when I was trying to use the grating stone. The crack was still there, so I ended up just truing it. It was bothering me more than anything. Oh well, hopefully I avoid more of this in the future.

I'll check out the video for sure. There was nothing mentioned in the handbook. If anyone from Tormek is on here, I would really suggest having first few chapters talking about stones, care, and beginners guide etc., for it? Also, there is a lot of words and relatively less pictures. The opposite would be nice. Thankfully, they have a lot of great video's online...
Title: Re: Chipped the stone. What now?
Post by: cbwx34 on February 28, 2022, 02:45:36 PM
Quote from: dadinthegarageww on February 28, 2022, 01:15:14 PM
I don't think the blade caught the wheel because of a square edge. I think what happened was that I let loose a bit and since the stone was rotating towards the edge, it pulled the blade with it. That is when it dug in.
...

Didn't mean to imply that the sharp edge caught the knife... just that it makes sharpening a bit easier.  (It keeps the edge from cutting into the knife).