I bought one just for my chisels and planes and kitchen and pocket knives. I recieved a bunch of nice wood carving chisels from my Grandfather earlier this winter and I've been slowly working my way through them, getting them all up to snuff. I use it like I've always used work stones, though generally they were never as fine. Just like in razors, i use it for any work above 1000 grit. It's wearing differently, rather unevenly across the surface, but I use that to my advantage with blades with curves and re-curves, and I've got a couple different radius chisels so i want it to function as a slip stone too. It's a bout with five planes so I've got room for different options. but! Let me tell ya... my chisels are insanley sharp!
waaayyyyyy sharper than what i need.
A classic excersice in futility though because they don't stay that sharp very long. The couple I have in my job-site toolbox take a real beating, but they start out shaving arm hair! Using a coticule for that has really elevated those edges to the next level.
I usually start with a VERY heavy slurry, and water it down over three or four really big dilutions, finish on water... same old, same old. I do cheat and use a gauge for planes and chisels.. i"m anal about setting them up square with really crisp corners and a dead flat bevel plane and I just can't do that as well free-hand as I can with the jig.
One thing I do differently from my razors is to strop on a flat piece of latigo treated with TI paste or crox, with a
lot of pressure. For my kitchen knives, i go to the hanging strops i pasted with Dovo red and crox, back when i was still messing with pastes
Sorry, no video though
I'm sure youtube's got tons.