Chef's knife. Used only lightly since the last video.
My straight razor. Best I can guess, my last sharpening was around a month ago, and it has essentially been used every day since. I have done nothing to it, since. Not a single swipe on a strop other than immediately following the last sharpening.
Curiously similar to the unfinished chef knife to the eye. I finish for the feel, and my skin can't tell the difference between this and a bevel that is shiny. This ruby will make a really shiny mirror, if you want that.
This is the first time I have looked at an edge under the microscope. Not my bag. I'm impressed with myself that this looks exactly like what I described. Just knocking off the high spots. You can even see the difference, really. You can feel it.
This is a knife I ground myself, pretty close enough. It was a mora lainated blade, with a scandi grind. I chopped about an inch off the tip and obviously descandied it. eKtretz, I originally left the tip really fat, because at the time I couldn't form a good tip. I figured I would get back to it when I got better at that. After some time using these convex stones, i took this knife and finished it with the curved Norton. This is when I realized the amount of force and resistance when reprofiling on the Norton is too high to use like my razor stone; hence, i added that additional block to give it a more positive grip, and to keep the blade farther from myself when using this higher force. But otherwise, this is the best tip I ever made, anyway. And unlike trying to do it on a flat stone, where you constantly adjust your angles and squirm this way and that to get what you want? This is almost completely autopilot. The stone is the compliment of natural biomechanics, making it an ideal and infinitely adjustable tool for making various lengths and curvatures of clam-shell shapes; e.g. knife and edge shapes. Just there's no instruction manual that would make sense for it. If you wanted to learn it, you are just as well to watch someone else do it, then get on the bike and start pedaling.
Some hard evidence that perhaps I'm not prone to blowing smoke or having flights of fancy. I made two of them; this one is still unused. The other is on the saw, and has been my do-all for the last couple three years. I also increased the set of the teeth using only smooth jaw needle nose pliers. She's right as rain.
edit1: Fudge. I am gonna edit this to make the pics smaller. I forgot how to do this.
edit2: Ok, everything I do seems to just make it worse. So this is it.
edit3: I already knew this before looking under the microscope. That the bevel on the chef knife is going to be more-or-less flat but actually slightly convexed. And fairly consistently so. Everything you do on this convex stone, when using the motions I use, produces varying degrees of this slight convexity. This is not necessarily a bad thing for these tools. It is generally advantageous for sharpening. This is one of the other ways to increase the cutting and reducing the burnishing by reducing the amount of surface area on the stone while cutting in the edge. And it produces the tip very easily. You adjust your motions and the spot on the stone you are using, and this adjusts the amount of convexity you get. This is what makes it so easy to blend in the tip. I did not use a slush/lapping stone to blend things in at the end, on that tip; just a quick rub with wet/dry; you're looking at the grind right off the norton.
It's like flying a helicopter. It's hard at first, because there are so many variables you are learning, but then things settle down. Unlike a helicopter, you get to crash as many times as you want without any significant repercussions. Once you can keep in the air without thinking about it, now you can make your flight plan and stick to it. And when sharpening, you have built in GPS. You know when you're on the bevel, proper, because you can feel the tool is doing the work. I'd go so far as to say, as long as the file is chooching rather than choking, and your angle isn't higher than you like, you will end up with a razor sharp hard edge where bur falls off with mean look.
Even the edge will tend towards a slight smile/curve. You can adjust this to a lot (the gouge chisel) or a little, in order to approach flat. Flat is relative, somewhat. Just a matter of increasing the radius until it's flat enough. And a matter of controlling this motion, now that you learned to fly this helicopter. OF course on longer blades, you adjust the shape of your edge by where you spend more time. It's short blades (chisels, I guess) where perfectly straight is not going to be convenient to maintain.
eKretz, btw. When you mentioned the "high pressure" thing, I sense you watched a Stefan Wolf video. Yes, that works. But it's not overcoming the surface area and getting the stone to cut like a file. The file is still choking. This force causes the stone to crumble and release particles. Then you use this flat ark like a lapping stone. And notice how long this takes on a reported soft knife. And then there's that "microbevel" to get the schmoo off. It's a perfectly good way to use the stone, if that's your preferred paradigm. I have tried it, and... meh. Sub par. Also, the particles are of dubious efficacy, IMO. I've tried using ark dust as a stropping compound, and my conclusion is it simply doesn't cut effectively, even carbon steel. So this method just might be more of a rough/live file action as much as lapping.
You can get the stone to chooch without curving it, too, just by tilting the blade just slightly towards the edge and drawing the blade. But this is going to quickly turn the stone into a saddle if it becomes your norm. This reverse curve hugs your bevel and increases the surface area. Then you have to fix it. Reflatten it? Or... just take the corners off and keep on chugging? Maybe your decision is different, now that you read this and will have tried it by then.
So thanks to all participants in the thread. This forum is a unique place where new ideas sometimes get to see a glimpse of daylight. When it come to these file-stones, keep your barracuda in the water. Shape first, shine little. Burr is a four letter word. Burnishing should be. Shiny != sharp. And also, don't believe for a second that all of our ancestors were nearly as stupid as we are today. And if you think knowledge can't be lost now that we have the internet? It's the exact opposite. History can be rewritten easier than ever.
In case anyone would like to know as much about machining as I pretend to, it's free and easy. Just watch ToT videos for an hour a day until you're caught up. Don't overdo it though. If you watch watch more than 2 hours in a row, you might have an existential crisis. Behind that carefree veneer and the dad jokes, Tony is a deeply troubled man.