This was very informative. I think the Naniwas will be useful for a karambit of mine that I can’t sharpen as readily with a regular whetstone. Love the DMT cards too, handy all arounder to have.
@Anderdale22 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@jontaylor4511Ай бұрын
I use a small sharpening stone a bit bigger than a magnet. I've sharpened so many secateurs and hedge clippers, some were dumped just because they were blunt.
@pamelah64316 ай бұрын
Just wondering what kind of rocks that lady was pruning to result in a pruner THAT dull. I use a Speedy Sharp carbide sharpener as needed for my #2. (I'm a professional home gardener. It's on my hip every day all day.) Do 3 swipes on the cutting edge, 1 swipe on the flat side. Prune all day. The stone Felco makes is lovely, but is also like $30... The biggest thing is sap. Use a bit & blade cleaner to melt it off & a wire brush for the persistent junk and you're back to the races.
@Gman10242 жыл бұрын
They all looked fully capable of putting good edges on. I'd probably go with the rounded stones for their versatility. That is, if I knew how to sharpen stuff. 😃
@roderickfemm87996 ай бұрын
I already use the DT Diamond flat file; I have the one with the red hinge area, I don't know what the difference is with the one with the blue hinge, should I be using both?
@SharpeningSupplies6 ай бұрын
The color indicates the grit. Red = 600 grit, blue = 325 grit. If you're getting good results with your flat file you don't need the blue. If you want to speed up the sharpening process, a coarser grit would help with that.
@HPAcustomriflesandcerakote2 жыл бұрын
I would have gone with the Naniwa Gouken curved water stones as well, or possibly a ceramic rod
@JohnnyNorfolk Жыл бұрын
I use my old Felco Blue and White sharpening dry stone.