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Quote from: tgbto on Yesterday at 04:35:03 PMStill, from a physics standpoint, in a situation where a solid moves in relationship to another, the friction coefficient is the ratio of the tangential force to the normal force. If there is no friction, there is no tangential force applied to the material being cut, so no work being done and obviously no matter being removed.
Quote from: Sir Amwell on Today at 01:22:16 AMEventually found that my trusted ceramic stones just couldn't handle the harder steels, loads of work, glazing on the stones,
Quote from: Thy Will Be Done on Yesterday at 02:29:37 PMFriction is nothing more than generating heat.
Quote from: Thy Will Be Done on Yesterday at 02:29:37 PMThis is patently false and a myth that needs to die. Friction is nothing more than generating heat.

Quote from: tgbto on Yesterday at 09:03:24 AMIf you reduce friction you will reduce sharpening efficiency. In another post, you seem to complain that the stone is glazed and needs refreshing... If the stone wears down it means that new abrasives are exposed, therefore maintaining sharpening efficiency. If the stone wears down too quickly, it means it is not hard enough for the material you're trying to sharpen.
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