A few strokes on a belt sander do wonders for a lawnmower blade, in less time than is necessary to setup the Tormek. And the Tormek will remove metal much slower than the belt sander, especially on a thick blade.
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Andy on February 11, 2026, 09:01:18 PMIt must have been a good test. But I didn't understand anything. The translation must have been imperfect.
Quote from: carlhanger on February 03, 2026, 10:03:21 PMThe next challenge is avoiding an overgrind around the first third of the blade (coming from the handle)
Quote from: BeSharp on February 01, 2026, 05:53:06 PMResults Oriented - Not Equipment Nor Protocol Specific
The report shows (with the caveat below) good Cutting Edge Retention ("CER") is not equipment dependent - good CER values was achieved with three different pieces of equipment. Also, KnifeGrinder's protocols are not the only way to achieve good CER. That's why on page 25, under Conclusions, I stated, "Experiment"!
The caveat is that guided sharpening (knife clamped + guide bar) achieved much higher CER values than those that did not (sharpeners PB, WK, OA, and KH). In KGA Variation #1 (page 14), half a degree angle made a noticeable difference to CER values.
QuoteI posted somewhere else last week that I helped a commercial fisherman get his knives from around 265 BESS to around 95 BESS by deburring at .5 degree higher than the 15ยบ angle.
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