Recommendation for the second waterstone?

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AddictforLife

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Currently I have a a 1000K king and I am looking for a second stone. I am on a budget I am looking for the best value for a stone to get my knife very sharp. I have consider the king 4000 grits and 6000 grits stone, but I am not sure if they are good stones to buy. I am sure there are better one's out there.
 
A Suehiro 6k has filled the role beautifully for me, and others love the Rika 5k.
Don't sell King stones short. Sure, they're not the best around, but they are solid performers, especially if you know the stone well. A while back, was challenged by Chef Ma (KC) to learn to polish a bevel on my 1k King. Once I figured it out, there isn't much it can't do on a stainless, or monosteel carbon.
 
I like Sigma II 3K, 6K and 10K.

Good fast cutting stones, little to no dishing and good feedback.

M
 
I have to go for the Rika 5k as well, I like it so much I have one for home and one for work.
 
I have both the Ritka and the Gessin and I prefer the Gessin 4000 or 5000 hands down. I personally wasn't that impressed with the Ritka.:eyebrow: I say go with the Gessin here: http://www.japaneseknifeimports.com/sharpening-supplies/shiage-toishi.html. :2cents:
 
Rika or Gesshin 5k. The Gesshin 4k would probably be outside our price range but it is very popular also.
 
Yeah. I'm a Gesshin user, as well. I guess it just depends on exactly what you're willing to spend.
 
I mean he said budget, Rika 5k is the way to go here. Great stone with plenty of bang for the buck. Wanna spend more? Sure, gesshin or choosera.
 
What is the big difference on the Gesshin 4000 and 5000 besides the 5000 is splash and go. Quite a difference in price.

I like the Rika, but it is all I have known in that range.
 
What is the big difference on the Gesshin 4000 and 5000 besides the 5000 is splash and go. Quite a difference in price.

I like the Rika, but it is all I have known in that range.

Jon has done videos on both of them:
[video=youtube;dc5zT44voQo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dc5zT44voQo[/video]
[video=youtube;Udk3IYInhDw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Udk3IYInhDw[/video]
 
I have a togiharo 1000k, 4000k combo that really does a great job. Give me a laser edge with just the right amount of toothiness.
 
Thank you for posting the videos, but I don't think they answered my question on the price difference between the two. The 4k looks to be more of a mid stone, and he talks about the rate of cutting on it that surprises people. 5k seems to be more of a finishing stone, especially with the extra mud worked up.

Was just curious that the same line (name at least, though one splash and go and the other not) had 2 that close together that seemed pretty far apart. Still only tried one set of stones, and still learning on those, so I don't have the variety to compare to.
 
Thank you for posting the videos, but I don't think they answered my question on the price difference between the two. The 4k looks to be more of a mid stone, and he talks about the rate of cutting on it that surprises people. 5k seems to be more of a finishing stone, especially with the extra mud worked up.

Was just curious that the same line (name at least, though one splash and go and the other not) had 2 that close together that seemed pretty far apart. Still only tried one set of stones, and still learning on those, so I don't have the variety to compare to.
The 5k and 4k are from different "lines." The 5k is a middle hardness, splash n go and, as you mentioned, is mainly a finisher. I find that I rarely have any burr left once I'm done with it and on the occasion I do have a little, it is comes off easily stropping on pretty much anything to yield a clean edge. I'd say the edge I get from it is somewhat finer than the average 5k synthetic. Like most splash n go stones, it is a little slower than average and the finish is shinier than most, if that matters to you. I use this stone a lot. If my memory serves me correctly, the 4k stone is a little harder and is fast on pretty much any steel (although I find speed on higher grit stones to be a non-issue). It is fairly thirsty and leaves a relatively aggressive edge. Burr removal following this stone is a little more involved but still not generally an issue. The finish has a matte appearance regardless of steel type.
 
I also have the JKI Gesshin 4K. It's not the cheapest, but its really really good: cuts faster even than some much lower grit stones and leaves a really even, bright, and aggressive edge.
Between that and your 10k I think you would have 90% of your possible sharpening needs covered (might possibly need something in the sub 1k range to do major grinding).
 
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