cenc
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2016
- Messages
- 60
- Reaction score
- 3
Hey KKF,
These posts seem to be fruitless for me , but I really enjoy using this stone and curiosity overwhelms me everything I use it. Does anyone have even a clue or a guess as to where this could be from??? Anyone have a stone that looks similar??
I got it on ebay from a carpenter's collection along with a thin ohira renge suita which was obvious to me from the get go. However, this other stone eludes me.
This orange/Tamagoiro karasu stone absorbs water very quickly because of all the Su, and gives off slurry when sharpening hard steels. It isn't very fast, unless i am mistaken and the swarf is sinking into the Su. It kicks up some slurry when sharpening an edge but not much..
When polishing jigane, it tends to mud up fairly quickly and get a bit sticky, but still has a hard sensation to the cutting feeling. It leaves a scratch pattern at about 4k to 6k depending on pressure and slurry amount.
Now that I think about it, it kind of reminds me of a 4k imanishi tamago.
The edge retention it gives is miraculous and I can keep a toothy edge through a whole prep shift on poly boards. Pretty wild.
Beautiful stone regardless of all its wonderful sharpening properties. I tried to capture a close up of the karasu pattern and the Su spots. The orange spots all over the stone are little su.. there is also very tiny Goma pattern. Sorry if the quality is bad.
Any discussion is much loved. Thank you KKF.
These posts seem to be fruitless for me , but I really enjoy using this stone and curiosity overwhelms me everything I use it. Does anyone have even a clue or a guess as to where this could be from??? Anyone have a stone that looks similar??
I got it on ebay from a carpenter's collection along with a thin ohira renge suita which was obvious to me from the get go. However, this other stone eludes me.
This orange/Tamagoiro karasu stone absorbs water very quickly because of all the Su, and gives off slurry when sharpening hard steels. It isn't very fast, unless i am mistaken and the swarf is sinking into the Su. It kicks up some slurry when sharpening an edge but not much..
When polishing jigane, it tends to mud up fairly quickly and get a bit sticky, but still has a hard sensation to the cutting feeling. It leaves a scratch pattern at about 4k to 6k depending on pressure and slurry amount.
Now that I think about it, it kind of reminds me of a 4k imanishi tamago.
The edge retention it gives is miraculous and I can keep a toothy edge through a whole prep shift on poly boards. Pretty wild.
Beautiful stone regardless of all its wonderful sharpening properties. I tried to capture a close up of the karasu pattern and the Su spots. The orange spots all over the stone are little su.. there is also very tiny Goma pattern. Sorry if the quality is bad.
Any discussion is much loved. Thank you KKF.