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Quote from: Basboi85 on May 31, 2026, 11:27:43 PMMay i make a suggestion,That's really helpful and I never thought of deburring that way, it makes sense to me so I'll give it a try. Always willing to learn.
I'm probably going to get some stick for this but this is what I do.
When I hone freehand on the tormek I don't hone at the top of the wheel,
I hone if you imagine the honing wheel a clock,
I hone at the 3oclock position, that way I can see directly when the edge meets the honing wheel and ever so slightly tilt the apex so the very tip gets more of the honing,
I should also mention that when I get to honing I do own a t1 and a t8,
I use the t1 composite wheel to do the initial rough removal of the burr ( say 2/3 passes each side using medium to light pressure)
After then checking to see how much burr is left that I can feel on my thumbnail I'll then do the same again but literally light to just touching pressure on the t8 leather wheel and do again maybe another 2-3 passes with green compound.
If I still need to do more passes I'll do little to next to no pressure until I cant feel any burr.
I'll then wipe the edge clean and do a couple of again next to no pressure on a paddle strop.
I'll then test the edge on thin paper like phone book paper/thin till receipt paper and then rizzla green.
I sharpen my knives to 17 dps on the SG stone,
I don't have expensive knives atm ( I own knives from ikea ( vőrda range),
I have sharpened family global knives the same and have achieved the same results for what my 50p is worth
Quote from: kwakster on May 28, 2026, 12:13:15 PMThe 1200 grit CBN wheel will most certainly grind an initial edge on ceramic knives, but that edge will be completely unusable due to chipping (even with careful use)Thank's for the intel...
For most commercial work after creating an initial edge on the SB-250 Blackstone i refine on a first Paper Wheel with 15 micron diamond compound (edge is still unusable after this), and then at least up to 6 micron diamond compound on a second Paper Wheel.
When there are no large chips i often only use the 15 and 6 micron Paper Wheels.
Further refinement with 3 micron diamond compound on a third Paper Wheel or even 1 micron diamond compound on a fourth Paper Wheel leads to a noticeable keener edge as well as much longer edge longevity.
The problem is of course that this also takes much more time, so after a lot of experimenting & testing i have found refinement up to 6 micron to be a good balance of edge keenness & longevity, and time spent sharpening/polishing.
Also: i avoid working on cheap ceramic knives, these are not worth it.
These days i only do quality ceramics.
Maybe this older thread is also helpful:
https://forum.tormek.com/index.php/topic,5672.0.html
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