To those new to sharpening of chisel tools and such, I will offer what I came across a few years back. It is called the "Scary Sharp" method, the first link is to original article by Steve Lamantia who was one of the first to publicize the system. The Scary Sharp system will allow one to get excellent expert results for just a very few dollars investment in materials readily obtainable at Home Depot or Wally World.
In case some should think it is just humorous, the second link is to Goggle for "Scary Sharp," which yielded 1,480,000 or so serious hits.
The system consists of using adhesive to adhere cheap abrasive sheets to a true flat surface such as plate glass & etc. I use the side to side variant, (freehand,no fixture required) I find it produces the quickest results for a truly scary sharp blade cutting edge. I do put the final honing to all my blades using a hard linen buffing wheel with the mandrel chucked up in the drill press. The Jewelers rouge I apply to top flat back of the wheel, not the outer face edge used for normal buffing. No more than a very light touch is required on bevel and back of blade to put that final honed razor edge on.
A safety note: I never attempt to hone leading edge of the blade into buffing wheel rotation direction, if it should grab, the results to one's health could be less than desirable. Oh yeah, don't use the (article referenced) Neanderthal thumb test for a sharpness check, and don't ask how I know.
I got my heavy plate glass scrap for nada at a local glass and mirror shop, used a common glass cutter to shape several glass strips for specific grits, this allows one to rapidly progress from start to end result. I also use the Scary Sharp system for sharpening all my knives, not sure where I last put my oil and water stones?
http://www.shavings.net/SCARY.HTM#original
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=scary+sharp
In case some should think it is just humorous, the second link is to Goggle for "Scary Sharp," which yielded 1,480,000 or so serious hits.
The system consists of using adhesive to adhere cheap abrasive sheets to a true flat surface such as plate glass & etc. I use the side to side variant, (freehand,no fixture required) I find it produces the quickest results for a truly scary sharp blade cutting edge. I do put the final honing to all my blades using a hard linen buffing wheel with the mandrel chucked up in the drill press. The Jewelers rouge I apply to top flat back of the wheel, not the outer face edge used for normal buffing. No more than a very light touch is required on bevel and back of blade to put that final honed razor edge on.
A safety note: I never attempt to hone leading edge of the blade into buffing wheel rotation direction, if it should grab, the results to one's health could be less than desirable. Oh yeah, don't use the (article referenced) Neanderthal thumb test for a sharpness check, and don't ask how I know.
I got my heavy plate glass scrap for nada at a local glass and mirror shop, used a common glass cutter to shape several glass strips for specific grits, this allows one to rapidly progress from start to end result. I also use the Scary Sharp system for sharpening all my knives, not sure where I last put my oil and water stones?
http://www.shavings.net/SCARY.HTM#original
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=scary+sharp