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Thread: Bowl Gouge Contoured Honing Stone Recommendations

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
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    Beautiful Lexington, SC
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    776

    Bowl Gouge Contoured Honing Stone Recommendations

    I'm considering a contoured honing stone to touch up the edge on my D-way bowl gouge in between trips to the grinder. I'm using a CBN wheel.

    What have you guys had success with?

    Thanks,
    Tim

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Chicago Heights, Il.
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    2,136
    I take it the honing device would be concave. I would suggest a flat diamond card to hone the the outside bevel. A concave one would not conform to the profile of the gouge. I would not hone the inside.
    Member Illiana Woodturners

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    E TN, near Knoxville
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    12,298
    Quote Originally Posted by Tim Boger View Post
    I'm considering a contoured honing stone to touch up the edge on my D-way bowl gouge in between trips to the grinder. I'm using a CBN wheel.

    What have you guys had success with?
    Hi Tim,

    For the outside curve of a fingernail grind or the inside?

    For the outside, I always use these little flat paddle hones, the extra fine blue one. I find it easy to control by putting my forefinger just above the diamond plate so I can "feel" the contact between the edge and the heel. Should I mail one to you to try?

    hones.gif

    For the inside of the flute, I knock the grinder burr off with either an extremely fine small-radius/long-taper conical diamond hone (https://www.amazon.com/DMT-DCSFH-Dia.../dp/B00004WFT1) or a ceramic hone the other John Jordan (the famous one) carries (http://www.johnjordanwoodturning.com...Slipstone.html), either of them laid flat in the flute and worked around the edge, just takes a few seconds. Both of these are finer than a CBN wheel but the ceramic slipstone is even finer. I haven't tried it on the outside of a gouge yet but it should work.

    I find honing inside the flut especially important for a razor edge on my spindle gouges and on my bowl gouges for finish cuts, but I don't think it's needed on bowl gouges for rough work since any burr from the grinder is ripped off in an instant.

    JKJ

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Franklin,VA.
    Posts
    24
    I bought a teardrop shape diamond hone from Alan Lacer that works well for me.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Wilmette, IL
    Posts
    204
    I use a dowel that is sized to fit the inside flute having dressed the dowel with rubbing compound (green). I picked green as I understand that it is used for polishing stainless steel, so it seemed right. It seems to work. On bigger gouges that I sharpen by hand on a vertical belt sander I use the attached cheap, narrow buffing wheel on the inside. Again dressed with green compound.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    Lummi Island, WA
    Posts
    665
    I’ve been using Dave’s (D-Way Tools) CBN honing plate for a while now for honing the bevel, and the HoneStar contoured CBN honing plate ( from Craft Supplies) for the flute. In practice, I find I seldom use the contoured plate, but its nice to have when I need it. The D-Way plate is 320 on one side, 600 I think on the other - its handy for touching up Macnaughton tools, too.

  7. #7
    If I hone the flute, I use my Tormek honing leather wheel. Most of the time I never bother. I may have to try playing with that again to see if it makes any real difference. For fine finish cuts, I will use a finer grit wheel.

    robo hippy

  8. #8
    I use a diamond slipstone sold by Alan Lacer. The large radius edge perfectly fits many bowl gouges and the small radius fits my ⅜" bowl gouge. Both faces are coated with 600 grit diamond.
    Bill

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