I meant as the smallest angle, not that it was the only angle.
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I got a whetstone with a Japanese style knife last year and it has been spot on, surprisingly easy to use and gets the knife sharp. I tend to hardly use it and pass the knife on a honing rod and leather strop every few weeks, maybe the whetstone once a month if that.
I just measured the angle of the 17° hole on my Lansky and with a rod and stone fitted. With the rod on the bottom of the hole it's @ 14° and touching the top @ 15.5°. Of course the amount of blade protruding from the front of the clamp will also have an effect on the angle. I expect Lansky will have their optimum blade lengths and widths they used when giving the angle of each hole a value. That 17° hole is all you need for kitchen knives and most others. Once you learn to use a particular sharpening method you get a feel for getting the angle right, when I first got the Lansky I would run a black Sharpie along the edge on both sides to show the width of the fresh edge as the line was worn off. You only need to get it wrong a couple of times before you stop wasting time and effort and get it right! The only slight bugbear with the Lansky is that a longer blade needs to be removed and refitted in order to do it in 2 halves, 5-6 inches and under is fine.
Son's Leatherman . . .
Before, Himalayan relief profile
https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-...pcVDk5c-XL.jpg
After, shaving sharp . . .
https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-...5tFfgBD-XL.jpg
The good stuff is done on a stone, . . .
https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-...-P6kQ7PK-L.jpg
https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-...-Bhsg24r-L.jpg
Some great results for sure there!
The challenges with longer blades, and the fact the 17 deg isn't even a correct profile makes me feel it is for more bush / tactical knives.
I fiind on some blades I can sharpen the holding part of the lansky or that the red screw dial gets in the way on smaller ones.
Agricultural would be my summary of it, but less so than some of the heinous suggestions here!
Funnily enough, these arrived this week. I bought one of their water sharpener thingies as well, so hopefully I can keep them nicely honed.
https://photos.smugmug.com/photos/i-...-gh3Hgqw-L.jpg
OK so my wife bought me the HORL 2 for my birthday. I’ve had the felt tip pen out on 2 knives so far and re-profiled the blades to 15deg after using a variety of water stone / Lansky systems.
The first profile took a while, but after a finish and a strop, damn the blade is sharp. This is just their standard wheels, there are 2 finer ones to go for; like the rabbit hole hobby.
Cannot decide yet if they are want / need in the scheme of things.
Confess I am with Wolfie - I use a whetstone (more than one actually) and find them simple and versatile. Finish with a strop.
Mind you I am not a Global knives fan, I think the handles are horrible and the balance for me is all off. I’ve had a couple and got rid of them. I also suspect the steel is excessively hard and consequently they are extremely hard to sharpen.
Perhaps that is why I didn’t like whetstones with them. With the HORL I’m laughing how sharp they are, and rather scared. I know a blunt knife slips, but if you get it wrong with a really sharp one it stops at bone lol.
Weird isn’t it, I love the handles and balance; I find the dimples really handy for grip when I’m getting a little greasy & hands on.
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I have two kinds of wetstone - coarse and fine, sharpen my knives twice a year and in between i use steel rod to maintain edge.
I bought a Horl2 which seems to have given good results on first attempt.
Does using the horl, which has magnets to hold the knife, create any risk to watches through magnetisation?
Old thread - but I got a Horl2 the other week.
It is the best bit of sharpening kit ever.
I was torn between replacing all my knives or trying to salvage them - and the Horl has absolutely renewed them.
Really very impressed, and you immediately forget the cost once you use it a few times.
If it hasn’t won awards, then it should.
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Horl is 7 times that price. It remains to be seen if Horl are 7 times better than the copycats.
My set-up cost about £1200 plus extra grits. It’s so good it takes a few hours to notice I’ve cut myself.
Most dangerous knife is usually considered the bread knife, but for me it’s the flexible fish knife.
I’m really tempted by the Horl setup though as the quick sharpen appears much easier than getting my kit out and set up.
Review of the copies vs the original by Nic at Meat Smoke Fire: https://m.facebook.com/story.php?sto...00063743268475
Concerning the curved tips, I’m trying to picture how sever a curve, as long as it’s not greater than the diameter of the disk, I can’t see why not. Or you sharpen the first part of the blade and then use a chopping board to raise the sharpener to the required height ( which some thick blades require the use of a block anyway )
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My cooking knives are all very sharp now thanks to Horl I got for Christmas.
Be interested to hear if anyone has the extra discs and what they think of them.
You need to create a 'wire edge' or 'burr' before moving to the other side of the blade. Once you have a burr you're done on that side, move on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SPVUc1hWxEc
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tiIsAn1ZGkw
I ended up buying an Any Sharp last night for a very reasonable £10. We'll see how it goes.
Although I do all the cooking in our house and enjoy it, I'm not a professional chef so really can't justify some of the daft, expensive kit being touted here.
I liked the look of the Horl, but … :chargrined:
The Chef’s Choice electric ones at £150-ish are about as far as I can justify, and really pleased with the results.
Still got a Lansky kit, but it doesn’t see daylight much now.
Thanks, I’d read the burr before and follow it now they are profiled.
The felt tip trick I referred to was how you know the blade has been profiled correctly if you weren’t previously at 15 or 20 degrees: https://www.horl.com/dk/en/blog/the-...pening-process
I think I find the strop at the end the most relaxing part.
Cheap rubbish quality knives deserve a cheap rubbish quality sharper . Why pay more if you don’t care . This is the result of an ANY SHARP style sharper on my GUSTAV EML budget/midrange 6inch chefs knife. Would I use that style of sharper on my decent knives? No, I’ll stick to my HORL2
Note the wear to the blade on the mid to heal if the knife .
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...f8f9151d77.jpg
I recently got one of these after a fair bit of research. A little practice and it's more than enough for the average home chef in my humble opinion.
Whetstone Sharpening Stone Shapton Ceramic KUROMAKU #1500 by Shapton https://amzn.eu/d/h62XWiD
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I've just bought a HORL 2 based on all the recommendations here. I had some crappy two-wheel thing I used before but have some knives deserving of better, including the knife I bought as a chef in Cardiff in 1996 (I've lost my steel somewhere along the way).