If your happy with the sharpness of your Woodsmans, never mind. I confess to being part of the minority here that has never been completely satisfied with the edge I could produce...until now. I know the angle 3-blade heads can be sharpened at is limited by geometry, but I've still been experimenting with variations in steps and hones for several years. Most recently it looked something like this:
1) Drag two blades at a time, heel to point across a 12" or larger Mill bastard flat file with decreasing pressure on subsequent reps.
2) Repeat using a DMT fine diamond bench stone, lubed with water.
3) Repeat using a black Arkansas bench stone, lightly oiled.
Then some combination of the following:
4) DMT diafold fine diamond sharpener stroked across two blades at a time...and/or
5) DMT diafold extra fine diamond sharpener stroked across two blades at a time...and/or
6) Fine diamond half-round rod sharpener stroked across two blades at a time.
7) Pull across round ceramic rod.
8) Strop on leather or cardboard.
I know, I can spell A-N-A-L, but I always had the feeling after step #3 I was doing more harm than good... and I was. The scratches appearing under strong lighting on what was coming around as a nice mirror edge should have been a dead giveaway. In my experience, I just haven't found a diamond hone of fine enough grit to continue polishing the edge after stropping on a hard Arkansas stone. After step #3, I now finish with the fine (blue holder/pink stone) and ultra fine (yellow holder/white stone)from my Lansky sharpening kit with a smear of honing oil. Obviously you can't use the clamp, but I just lay the arrow across a knee and use circular motions from heel to point. Edges are keener than I've ever produced. I'm not plugging Lansky, I'm sure KME has some equivalent stones that will work. I do think the narrower (1/2") surface helps at this polishing stage. I know the edge on the Elites is supposed to be truer, but I still feel additional roughness out towards the point, that isn't noticeable at stages 1-3. It's almost as if they have a slight high burr from the new chisel grind on the point. You would think the file would take it out and it probably should, but I usually don't bother with more than 15-20 strokes per side at that phase. At any rate these steps will produce an edge even a perfectionist like me is satisfied with!