01-13-2019, 07:44 PM
Hey guys,
I’ve been thinking about something for awhile now. I’m still fairly new at this sharpening thing, only been doing it for a few years now. I hope this thread doesn’t seem silly to you guys, but here goes. With wet sharpening, there are no sparks, because the steel particles never get hot. In dry sharpening, like I do (I do almost all of my sharpening on a 1X42 Viel), obviously it creates sparks. Sparks are nothing more than superheated bits of metal. I’m very diligent about keeping my fingers on the blade, and dipping the knife in water at the first sign of heat. My question is about the heat creating the sparks. I’m not concerned about the burr, because it’s gets removed. I’m talking about the super fine line that makes up the edge of the edge. Even though the blade never gets hot, is it possible that the edge does? Is it also possible that as the superheated sparks come off the blade, the edge gets superheated as well, only to cool down immediately because of it’s thinness. Could it be that a wet ground edge holds up better? Let me know what you guys think.
Garry
I’ve been thinking about something for awhile now. I’m still fairly new at this sharpening thing, only been doing it for a few years now. I hope this thread doesn’t seem silly to you guys, but here goes. With wet sharpening, there are no sparks, because the steel particles never get hot. In dry sharpening, like I do (I do almost all of my sharpening on a 1X42 Viel), obviously it creates sparks. Sparks are nothing more than superheated bits of metal. I’m very diligent about keeping my fingers on the blade, and dipping the knife in water at the first sign of heat. My question is about the heat creating the sparks. I’m not concerned about the burr, because it’s gets removed. I’m talking about the super fine line that makes up the edge of the edge. Even though the blade never gets hot, is it possible that the edge does? Is it also possible that as the superheated sparks come off the blade, the edge gets superheated as well, only to cool down immediately because of it’s thinness. Could it be that a wet ground edge holds up better? Let me know what you guys think.
Garry

