I own a pair of DMT Duosharp diamond stones. One is fine/x-fine with 600 and 1200 grit (25 and 9 micron). The other is coarse/x-coarse with 220 and 325 grit (60 and 45 micron). These are big (2.5 by 8 inches) and cost about $60 each. So I have:
the Spyderco Goldenstone is equivalent to the standard white rods (3000).
On the way is a Spyderco 306UF 3x8 inch stone, which is ultra fine (8000). It comes in a nice leather pouch, just under $80.
If you watch the videos by jdavis882 where he discusses his "beginner kit" for freehand sharpening, it consists of:
You can buy smaller Diasharp plates (2x6 inch) and save some money, but the bigger plates give you more feel for what is going on and what angle you are holding.
It turns out I have the Knives Plus Strop. It is 8 by 2.5 inches, and comes loaded with chrome rouge. They say it should last you a lifetime, and it is well regarded.
Also available are the Spyderco Bench stones in a 8 by 2 inch size in plastic cases. These sell for $48 each, and you can buy coarse, fine, and extra fine, just like the sharpmaker rods.
Rough Rooster presents his beginner kit as 3 plates, all are DMT Diasharp.
The 325 plate will yield an edge that will shave hair. The 220 plate (x-coarse) really removes metal fast, and can be handy to speed up a big repair or reprofiling job -- if used with care. His coarse looks like a 3x8 and the others look larger as indicated. DMT sells both a 4x10 and a 2.5 by 11.5 plate. He never says, those dimensions are my guesses. DMT says you get 5 carats of diamond with the 10 inch plate.
Some searching finds: "King NEO is a splash-and-go 800 grit stone from Matsunaga Stone Co". So, this is a Japanese water stone. You can get it in 2 sizes, ST-2 is 210x73x25mm (8.26" x 2.87" x 0.98"). There is also a bigger ST-3.
Just for the record, Spyderco has 3 bench stones: medium, fine, and ultrafine.
At this time I have the 306UF, which is white - the ultrafine stone - big (3x8 inches).
The Medium (302M) and Fine (302F) and the smaller Ultrafine (302UF) are 2x8 inches.
Aluminum oxide and silicon carbide are softer than vanadium carbide, so you need diamond, boron carbide, or cubic boron nitride to abrade it. The aluminum oxide and silicon carbide will only abrade the steel matrix and chromium carbides, not the vanadium carbides. If you sharpen high vanadium steels with standard abrasives, you'll get the steel sharp, but will have torn the carbides out of the edge and so you're not getting any benefit from them and your edge won't hold any longer than a low-alloy steel would.
The claim is that with these high vanadium steels, you must use diamond at sizes below 10 microns (as a rule of thumb), if you want to shape carbide grains rather than expose or tear them out.
Here is a table of Knoop hardness values:
Glass 530 Tempered martensite at HRc60 700 Value questionable Quartz 820 Silicone dioxide, Arkansas stone Cementite 1025 Iron carbide Chromium oxide ~1200 Green compound (with alumina) Zirconia 1600 Zirconium dioxide Zirconia toughened alumina 1700 Chromium carbide 1735 Molybdenum carbide 1800 Tungsten carbide 1880 Aluminum oxide 2100 Alumina Silicon carbide 2480 Maybe harder due to hardness anisotropy Vanadium carbide 2660 Boron carbide 2750 Cubic boron nitride 4500 Diamond >7000
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