Thanks, Bart, the jig you suggested was a good idea, it lets me set most blades with the bevel perpendicular and flat to the field of view. That and a bit of time reading the manual have paid off.
I'd suggest that those chips are only
somewhat normal. Every blade seems to have them, though to generaly a lesser degree. (Both Denny's and Cedrick's honing appear in the photos) Some of them were picked up quite late in the process, the J.Haywood, for example, got them sometime through slurry dilutions.
...That curved brain thing though... i know a few people that would agree with you:w00t:
I've now got a mm ruler in the background of the photos (those dark blob things in the background), and coincidentaly, the span of the photos top to bottom seems to encompass exactly one mm. The ruler was all I could think of to show a sense of scale. I thought about using a dollar bill, but all I have is Canuck Bucks, which aren't very universal
I'm going to take the liberty of quoting the good Dr. Ralfson out of context to show what I agree may be the issue:
tat2ralfy said:
... I never go from a 1k synthetic to the Coticule without the pre dulling, as I find it totally gets rid of any chance of microchipping, ...
I haven't been doing exactly that, so it may be one of the factors at play. (grammar!)
I'll also take Toff's advice and try avoiding my slurry tones and limit myself to using another stone instead.
I think I'll do another dilucot, starting with a down-stroke, on the J.H. and see if I can't minimize the chipping.