Originally posted by Brock:
yeah started already....got one in my Lansky clamp...started about 20 strokes with extra course, then 20 with medium, and 20 with whetstone to finish...but still not sharp...
I noticed at the 25* position my sharpener is grounding the outside half of blade edge..so guessing there is slight discrepency between 25* on my Lansky and what was ground...so going to work it with course until I get a continuous grind on one edge...the work on other side. I have 3 months until deer season to get them
right.
Brock,the beauty of the KME knife sharpener is that it is infinitely adjustible to match whatever the blade angle is.Blade angles change depending on how wide the blade is and how it is positioned in the clamp.
I used to sharpen Grizzlies on the KME knife sharpener but have switched to the KME broadhead sharpener.Both do an excellent job but I think I've worked out a system that makes it go faster,using the broadhead sharpener.
I expect to have some new 200 Kodiaks in my hand tomorrow and it sounds like they will be way easier to sharpen than what I have become accustomed to.
This is the "How To" I did on using the broadhead sharpener.
http://tradgang.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=2;t=000115You don't even have to have stones.You can use just wet or dry sand paper laid on a flat,hard surface like glass,plate steel or smooth,ceramic tile.
You are fighting a sharpener that is a slightly different in angle and you will kill yourself before you get enough metal off with stones.That is some hard steel.Good luck with them.