Pike's Other Stones

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Desert Rat

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It's time we talk about some of Pike's other stones, they mined so many and not much is written about them or known about their quality's.

There's still plenty of them out there and I know some of you have labeled examples, so post them up and share your thoughts.

This 1891 Pike catalog lists the quarry these stones were mined, Black Diamond, Lamoille, White Mountain, Green Mountain and others.

https://archive.org/details/PikeMfgCo1891/mode/2up
 
Did we lose that 1891 catalog forever?
That would be such a shame..
 
I was gonna say - I couldn’t see it, and ask if you could send a PDF. That would be a shame if it’s just not there any more.

Were many of these produced as benchstones? Or were they all scythestones? I know the Lisbon Choc was, but haven’t seen any of the others…
 
I was gonna say - I couldn’t see it, and ask if you could send a PDF. That would be a shame if it’s just not there any more.

Were many of these produced as benchstones? Or were they all scythestones? I know the Lisbon Choc was, but haven’t seen any of the others…
Bench stones also and sometimes the exact quarry listed. I had no idea there were so many quarry's producing whetstones.

They claimed the Chocolate was their best all around stone and faster than the Washita, not quite as fine but capable of producing a shaving edge if used with oil.
 
The Pike 1891 catalog came from the pages of John H Graham & Co. It must be out there some place.

Image result for pike manufacturing catalog 1891 pdf
 
You’d have thought they’d do the most important stuff first. Where are their ******* priorities…?!


Indeed. Wayback is an Internet archive yes, but without abrasives there would be no Internet to archive. The original **** sapien tool, the rubbing rock; it's marks are evident everywhere around us if we know to look. Life is abrasive. Abrasives are life. Even KKF, purportedly a knife forum, is at its very core an abrasive forum. And therefore we must do everything we can to preserve this knowledge for future generations.
 
I had just downloaded that catalog as a PDF yesterday and now I can't, I have it on another computer though. Can you guys get it?

Any way I thought I had a Chocolate hone here but I'm no longer sure. It seems to lack the blue that is a tell it and also not as much mica. The stone has been used with oil though and seems to be showing more mica after a couple days in Simple Green.









It came from a seller in Rhode Island in what I think is probably a pine box. Not going to rule out something from across the pond.
Whatever it is it's my current favorite knife stone.
 
I seen a stone on another forum the other day that I thought for sure would-be Chocolate, mica, blue tint on a brownish stone but he said the slurry wasn't brown.

That blueish tint seems to be a pretty good tell.


Is there another known hone that has that color?
 
I had just downloaded that catalog as a PDF yesterday and now I can't, I have it on another computer though. Can you guys get it?

Any way I thought I had a Chocolate hone here but I'm no longer sure. It seems to lack the blue that is a tell it and also not as much mica. The stone has been used with oil though and seems to be showing more mica after a couple days in Simple Green.









It came from a seller in Rhode Island in what I think is probably a pine box. Not going to rule out something from across the pond.
Whatever it is it's my current favorite knife stone.
I believe you can attach the PDF in a post.
 
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