Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
Caught in a loop |
I have a whetstone I've had for 15-20 years that I recently uncovered while cleaning the garage to move my woodworking stuff into my "shop" area, and now that I have several chisels and a plane that need some attention on their cutting edges, I dug it out last week, then promptly put it away when I discovered why it got "lost" in the first place. The issue is that as a kid/teenager I was less than gentle with it, and there are some pretty good indentations in it where the material crumbled because I apparently ground the tip of something pretty good, probably without any kind of lubricant (water, oil, etc). It is a combination stone, and the larger grit side seems to be the one with most of the damage. Is there any way I can restore the flat surface? "In order to understand recursion, you must first learn the principle of recursion." | ||
|
On the wrong side of the Mobius strip |
Norton makes a flattening stone for this. https://www.amazon.com/Norton-...ords=stone+flattener I have used this on waterstones and it works well depending on how damaged your stone is will determine if you can completely clean it up. | |||
|
Caught in a loop |
Well that was fast. Thanks; it looks like that's exactly what I need. I highly doubt I'll be able to grind the groove out completely, but I bet I can get pretty close and get a good amount of usable surface area around it. "In order to understand recursion, you must first learn the principle of recursion." | |||
|
Member |
Flattening stone - $32 New Stone - $10 ________________________ | |||
|
Member |
Synthetic diamond stones can be used to true up natural stones, but use water and know the great the damage the longer the effort involved. Good gift idea. . | |||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |