Ken,
Thank you for the response. Been out of town and am just now catching up on things.
I understand your comments. There was plenty of questions and speculations in the original post.
Now that the holidays are over. The best course of action is to do just as you said. Take a tool to the wheel and learn how to use the machine.
The Jet does have the stone grader to change from coarse to fine. That said, I'm not sure how much I'll use it with the Diamond wheel in place.
Definitely will use water with an additive to protect and maintain the Diamond.
In a nutshell, I'm curious of the sharpness level obtained from the use of Jet/Tormek jigs and honing. Compared to using the Shapton ceramic stones.
The Jet is going to open new doors to sharpening tools that are difficult to jig on flat stones. I see the two systems complimenting each other rather than replacing.
As I get more experience. there will be better questions forthcoming.
Thank you for the warm welcome !!
Thank you for the response. Been out of town and am just now catching up on things.
I understand your comments. There was plenty of questions and speculations in the original post.
Now that the holidays are over. The best course of action is to do just as you said. Take a tool to the wheel and learn how to use the machine.
The Jet does have the stone grader to change from coarse to fine. That said, I'm not sure how much I'll use it with the Diamond wheel in place.
Definitely will use water with an additive to protect and maintain the Diamond.
In a nutshell, I'm curious of the sharpness level obtained from the use of Jet/Tormek jigs and honing. Compared to using the Shapton ceramic stones.
The Jet is going to open new doors to sharpening tools that are difficult to jig on flat stones. I see the two systems complimenting each other rather than replacing.
As I get more experience. there will be better questions forthcoming.
Thank you for the warm welcome !!