I guess I am not the sharpest knife in the block. Knowing there are some here that love knives I figured I get the real skinny pretty quick. Plus I was trying to avoid stupid youtube bad lessons that with no real experience I'd be hard pressed to discern.
Before starting this thread I had no idea there were fancy tools to help one maintain a consistent angle while sharpening. But with help of the post so far I am taking a stab at using a Lansky Professional System Precision Knife Sharpening Kit. A $50 dollar investment that may take more effort than the higher dollar wicked edge kit I'd love to own, but for the number of knives I have to keep sharp is probably sufficient.
I think I can help. I recently acquired a couple of nice Spyderco and Benchmade knives and went about learning to keep them sharp.
It doesn't have to be complicated!!!! The critical factor is holding a consistent stone/blade angle. Also, heavy pressure on the blade is NOT necessary. If you aren't getting good results, you're almost certainly not holding a consistent/correct angle.
Here's what saved the day for me:
- Spyderco Tri-Angle Sharpmaker (2 sets of synthetic stone bars, base, guard bars, instructional video) - about $75, easy to find. I got mine on Amazon.
- Spyderco's instructional videos (link below) - I viewed them online and they prompted me to buy the Sharpmaker (which have seen compared to the Lansky kit, if you've already acquired one). The videos are useful for any V-sharpener.
- A leather strop. I use an old belt; so far I have not found it necessary to use stropping compound with it. This is necessary to get that razor edge.
The Spyderco web site was a series of videos
here. Click "Load More" and look for the 4-part Sharpmaker videos (just hover over the thumbnails; it doesn't look like these will link directly).
The videos do not cover stropping, and I think it's necessary to get the shaving-sharp edge. All you need is a wide (an inch or more is fine), preferably unfinished leather belt. I step on the buckle end, pull it very tight, lay the blade flat on the leather and pull/push it spine-first for about 20 -30 strokes. Lots of Youtube videos about stropping - specify knife as opposed to straight razor, although there is a lot of overlap. As I said, with the Sharpmaker's fine-grit stones putting a near-final edge on my blades, I have found it unnecessary to use stropping compound.
I struggled all my life to get even a minimally decent edge on my knives; these videos and the Sharpmaker finally enabled me to get a shaving-sharp edge on all my knives.
NOTE: Truly dull knives are going to require either the Spyderco diamond blades (extra cost; I haven't tried these) or a 220-grit stone. Truly dull knives require so much metal to be removed that it would take a Very Long Time to get it done with the finer grit of the Sharpmaker stones.