I ordered a KME knife shapener yesterday. Does anyone know how long it takes to get it.
Well, I guess it depends on where you live, but you should have it within a week. You'll be sharpening every BH you have!
Good Luck! Kris
Ordered mine Friday and it came in Monday!
Howard,
Your order will ship tomorrow via USPS Priority Mail. I expect you'll have it by Friday. Thanks very much!
Ron
Howard...word of advise....go ahead and lay out all bh's and knives now. Because when you get it you be sharpening everything in site. It just saves alittle time....lol It can get addictive...especially if you have had a hard time getting things scarey sharp before, it is real easy.....love mine!
Thanks, Ron, the knifes and broad heads will have to wait til I get back from a 7 day cruise to Alaska (I leave Friday)
I ordered the broadhead sharpener a few weeks ago and was totally impressed when it arrived so I then ordered two of the stones. This morning I received a message from Ron at KME that he had noticed my second order and said that since I already had the sharpener he would send me the rest of the kit (the case and oil)at no charge.
They have my endorsement forever!
I sure like mine, I almost have every knife in the house sharp now, the wife says the trips to ER are going to go up. :rolleyes:
Man is this product that good. Who can i get one from.
There was a thread on here recently about KME Sharpeners. If I remember they discussed the difference between the knife sharpener and the broadhead sharpener in regards to the sharpening of broadheads. I think it was said the knife sharpener was great for both and could serve double duty. Does anyone remember this? I want to sharpen both, but can't afford both.
Shleprock, Go with the Knife sharpener then. You can sharpen both types of blade. The broadhead sharpener is easier to finish to do a broadhead, but it won't do knives
http://www.kmesharp.com/kme_video.html
I have both but find myself using the knife sharpener almost every time. It is an excellent product.
QuoteOriginally posted by vermonster13:
I have both but find myself using the knife sharpener almost every time. It is an excellent product.
Wish I had known at the time I ordered mine. :rolleyes: Seems like the knife sharpener can do everything, making it a much better choice. Oh well, I am going to print out the directions and give the broadhead sharpener its first test run tomorrow. ;) I am looking forward to the video on single bevel sharpening.
Thanks. :)
If your going to be sharpening a lot of insert bleeder blades you want the broadhead sharpener. Other ways I'd recommend the knife sharpener.
Hi Guys,
The knife sharpener is the better choice if you are sharpening heads that come with a decent factory bevel or if you're good with a file. Any laminated tip head that requires a lot of stock removal on the initial sharpening will be much faster and easier to sharpen with the broadhead sharpener. Bleeders and replacement blades can also be done much faster and easier with the BH sharpener than with the knife sharpener and because of their size, many of these smaller blades are impossible to do with the knife sharpener.
I wouldn't think of sharpening any laminated tip broadhead with the knife sharpener unless the head had been filed or otherwise "profiled" first. It would take literally hours to set the bevels with even the coarsest diamond stone. I'm looking for a file that will fit in the knife sharpeners stone carrier but, as you all know broadheads have higher Rockwell hardness than most files do. I try hard to sell only top quality stuff and I wouldn't be comfortable selling anyone an accessory file for the knife sharpener that wouldn't last a long time. I've experimented with several files and they all wear out after only a few heads. A nice radius tooth file would work except that they're designed to be used paralell to the edge, not into or away from the edge the way the knife sharpener works.
I wish I had a "one size fits all" system but, not yet. I'm working on it though. If you're even decent with a file and can use that for the initial stock removal, then the knife sharpener is the better choice. If you're not good with a file, or if you're gonna be sharpening bleeders and relacement blades, then the BH sharpener is the best choice. Just wanted to clear up any confusion. Thanks
Ron
Funny you should mention trying to find a file to work with the knife sharpener. I tried cutting a Nicholson file to fit the stone carrier. The problem I had wasn't the file wearing down. I just couldn't get the file to cut the Grizzlies I was trying to sharpen.
i have the KME sharpener and it's the ONLY way to sharpen broadheads...
wonderful product from a wonderful company with great service...
Can't say enough about Ron and his products. This guy will go out of his way to help. I had an idea and Ron worked with me and I couldn't be any happier with the end result. Thanks Ron.
Missed you at compton, I thought your were going to make the show..............moose
I was on the phone this evening with Ron while using the broadhead sharpener. I'll just say I have many bald spots on my left arm because of his helpful instructions.
Both quality products that work as advertised, and the best customer service around.
Great guy, great product!
How much are they and do they work on wensel woodsmans?
BD,
these kits are for 2 bladed heads or 4 bladed with bleeders or knives. For a WW all you need is a good 12-16" Nicholson mill bastard single cut file, fine arkansas stone, and thick piece of leather glued to a wooden block for stropping.
Ron, any more thoughts on a round file holder for us Simmons Sharks shooters to take care of of the concave radius at the rear of the blade. We need a round universal holder that would hold a standard round file and a ceramic rod for final finish. PLEASE ???
nocams :help: