kwselke
Member
I've spent just under a week relearning knife sharpening skills using a Spyderco Sharpmaker. I was never great with knife sharpeners, and aging has not helped steady my hands. I had become content to have lots of knives and send the dull ones I liked out for sharpening when needed.
I was familiar with round crock stick v-sharpeners, and came to realize that triangle rods could sharpen serrated edges. Then I thought... clamp the sharpener down and hold the knife in both hands while sharpening. I ordered a Sharpmaker. When it arrived I started practicing my technique on a 30 year old Chicago Cutlery made in the USA Chef Knife that was pitifully dull.
After about 20 hours of work I've learned the technique needed to use the Sharpmaker properly, decided diamond coarse rods were needed to revive extremely dull knives like the one I was learning on. Yesterday I ordered diamond rods. Today I moved on to working with knives only needing moderate amounts of sharpening, then knives that only needed touch up maintenance. My forth session with my practice knife made it as sharp as the ones I was just touching up.
I bought the Sharpmaker from Walmart online for about $56 delivered. The clamps were $12 from Home Depot. A pair of diamond Sharpmaker triangle rods are on their way from Midway USA for about $48. A bargain considering the knives I have needing maintenance, and the fact that I enjoy doing the work when I can do it well.
Use a light touch, be consistent, and let the tools do the work. Even a shaky old man like me can sharpen a knife reasonable well with the right tools.
I was familiar with round crock stick v-sharpeners, and came to realize that triangle rods could sharpen serrated edges. Then I thought... clamp the sharpener down and hold the knife in both hands while sharpening. I ordered a Sharpmaker. When it arrived I started practicing my technique on a 30 year old Chicago Cutlery made in the USA Chef Knife that was pitifully dull.
After about 20 hours of work I've learned the technique needed to use the Sharpmaker properly, decided diamond coarse rods were needed to revive extremely dull knives like the one I was learning on. Yesterday I ordered diamond rods. Today I moved on to working with knives only needing moderate amounts of sharpening, then knives that only needed touch up maintenance. My forth session with my practice knife made it as sharp as the ones I was just touching up.
I bought the Sharpmaker from Walmart online for about $56 delivered. The clamps were $12 from Home Depot. A pair of diamond Sharpmaker triangle rods are on their way from Midway USA for about $48. A bargain considering the knives I have needing maintenance, and the fact that I enjoy doing the work when I can do it well.
Use a light touch, be consistent, and let the tools do the work. Even a shaky old man like me can sharpen a knife reasonable well with the right tools.
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