Ok- I have had KME knife sharpener for a few years. No doubt a great piece of equip. I have read tons on TG. But honestly- I can spend hours and never get anything as sharp as my old accusharp w a few swipes and polish on ceramic sticks. (I even went back to an accusharp for kitchen knives- again just minutes for a sharp knife!) Give me a magnus head; accusharp, sticks (or other strop) and I have a shaving sharp head in a literally a couple of minutes!
Now I got the Kodiaks. Again- seem like an incredible weapon. I pulled out the KME and I spent an HOUR last night on ONE head- and no further ahead then when I started! It really is frustrating. . .
Any tips?? I really would love to learn this art of sharpening. One thing I have never learned- even at over a half century old! I suck.
Dan
I think you may be trying to hard and making something that is really pretty simple too complicated. All you need to do to the new Grizzlies is raise a burr on the flat side with a rough stone or file and then polish it off with either a fine stone or leather.
I too am 'sharpening challenged' and have a difficult time at putting an edge on anything.
I hear this term 'burr' all to often and don't understand what it is, feels like or looks like. Is there someone who can explain or illustrate what this is?
A burr is a thin line of flexible metal at the edge of the cutting blade. As you sharpen and develop the burr, it will get slightly larger until it becomes so large and flexible that it falls off. I sometimes get them off in thin strips... then I know I did a good job! Keep in mind, it's less than a tenth of an inch and runs the length of a blade. You can feel it on the opposite side of where your file is after you run the file about 10-20 times across the blade with decent pressure.
Using a coarse diamond stone on KME- Never got a burr. Tried a file- but then I start changing the factory grind. . .???
Dan...you DO NOT suck!
The KME is excellent, but...the problems you are having with the Grizzly's IMO are justified. It can be very frustrating at first, especially with a stone. You will not raise a burr with this method. I quit using stones with the KME for Grizzly's. "Sharpster" will spend all night talking with you to try and help you use the KME on Grizzly's, his dedication and professionalism is unprecedented.
I have better luck using KME with a whole sheet of 400 & 600 wet/dry sandpaper, used wet, on a marble chisel honing slab from Woodcraft. I then hone Grizz with paper wheel & compound using high rpm grinder. You can cut cellophane (plastic food wrap) in clean shreds just by hanging it freely, without it bunching-up. Try that with a "sharp" broadhead, it's difficult.
Send me a PM or give me a call if you care to (608)798-1103. If you do a SEARCH regarding subj. you will find that this has been brought up a bunch of times with lots of good advice.
Best of luck and don't give up!
Kris
Thanks A LOT Kris. By the sounds you have the KME broadhead sharpener? Mine is the knife sharpener.
Sure appreciate the offer. I may bug you at some point.
If any have search links they know of I appreciate it. I did search but found only a little help.
May need a different file.
Thanks for all the input.
Dan- I had some trouble getting the Grizzles as sharp as I like using a knife sharpener. I would sugest getting one of your ceramic sticks out and give the head a few (maybe 10) LIGHT strokes on the beveled side and then just one even lighter stroke on the oppostie side and see where your at...The new heads don't need much work to them at all. I have found that with these new heads less is more.
Don't "sharpen" but polish the edge.
QuoteOriginally posted by Rick Richard:
I too am 'sharpening challenged' and have a difficult time at putting an edge on anything.
I hear this term 'burr' all to often and don't understand what it is, feels like or looks like. Is there someone who can explain or illustrate what this is?
Google "sharpening blade burr" and amke sure you're looking at google imges, not google search. There a few illustrations that should help
Dan, call me.
I'm writing a tutorial for sharpening Grizzlies with each sharpener (BHD or knife) but I'm not done yet. This make take a few posts but any questions along the way will help me make sure the finished "how to" is clear and understandable.
Knife sharpener: First thing we need to do is find the correct angle setting. Clamp the BHD in the jaws, bevel side up and color the factory bevel with a sharpie or permanent marker.
Eyeball the angle as best you can, then take a few swipes with a coarse, dry stone just to see where the ink is being removed. A couple of quick swipes is enough.
If the ink is being removed from the shoulder of the bevel but not from the cutting edge, that means the angle is set too low. If the ink is coming off only at the very edge of the blade, you may want to lower the angle just a bit. (or you may not, it's better to have the angle set a bit too high than a bit too low). I like to see the ink coming off right at the cutting edge and maybe just a bit more than that. I don't try to duplicate the factory bevel, I'm only interested in sharpening the cutting edge.
Questions or clear?
Ron
Got it. thanks. Just shy of 26 degrees.
Huge strides tonight guys. I read, watched a couple vids, talked with Kris (from Packer country!) and I think I got a system that worked for me.
I clamped a bastard/mill file to my bench. Holding the factory grind as consistent as I could I worked the blade with smooth strokes down the file. With some "biting" of the file I got the blade to take off some good metal and begin to burr. Then I just stropped it on a piece of cardboard until the burr was gone (feeling with my fingernail). . . Ahhh. Hair falling off my arm. Now to do it again!
EDIT: A little added input here. I found I could get the burr to clean off quicker with the ceramic sticks followed by the cardboard strop. I may try to get a leather strop. Either way- I think I finally got Grizzs to sharpen. Yea me!!
The whole thing took less than 10 minutes- my kind of process.
Time will tell. Thanks for all the input.
Anymore would be great.
Dan
Single bevels whipped me last week so you're not alone. I've given up on them until I find a good reason to go back, there's already a lifetime supply of good double bevel and three blade heads out there for me to waste any more time with the singles!
I tell you Brad- I tend to agree, though I may have it FINALLY. Although- I am saying it again- 15 years with magnus, an accusharp, and some ceramic sticks were shaving sharp and killed a lot of game! Couldn't get easier.
I hope I can master the KME one day. Great tool, great people- I am just inhibited I guess.
KSdan,
Which ceramic rods would you recommend? I use an accusharp or a wheel sharpener now with magnus heads. A stropping on lether helps, but i think the rod version might be better.
What do you suggest
I just have some cheap ones (a pair) that fit in a base with holes placing them at a decent angle. I think it was a "smith" brand. I just hit the magnus with the accusharp- followed by light strokes on the sticks and they are shaving hair.
Now- don't get me wrong, I have seen guys get heads even sharper- like surgical scary sharp. That is why I went to KME- I really want to learn how to do that. But this routine I have done for 15+ years worked just fine. You can kill a deer with a 300 win mag or a .308. . . I am not sure the deer can tell the difference! :)
Hope it helps
Dan
OK guys. . . up late for some crazy reasons. . tried another head.
I quit! Heads are on TG classifieds. 25 TYD. (One sharpened, one factory ground screwed up, 4 never touched).
I give. Back to double bevels. . .
Dan
Yep, best to admit defeat and move on. It certainly isn't the product. I'M challenged at sharpening and was able to get my Grizzlys sharp with the KME broadhead sharpener. Best to find what works for you. The Grizzly and Kodiak WILL work for me, and I like the design and single bevel advantages. Good luck with what ever head you decide on, there are a bunch of great ones out there. :thumbsup:
I got a pack a day ago and hit it with a couple swipes on a diamond stone and it was sharp. Just lay it flat on the stone so the bevel doesn't change from the factory grind. Then flip it and lightly hit a stroke on the other side. I was just seeing what they would be like so I didn't even work it very much.
Mine got very sharp with ease. I am going to get a paper wheel for my grinder soon. Ron says those are the bees knees.
The KME broadhead sharpener is about as sharpening stupid proof as it gets for doing single bevel heads.
Heck with a coarse stone I can get any head shaving sharp in a couple of minutes without honing it. Any I'm very sharpening challenged. Before the KME products I could take a perfect head and dull it to round in two stokes. LOL
Mike
The mechanics of sharpening are often really misunderstood. It is a good idea for those who don't understand how it all works, and why stropping works, to do a little reading and look at some photos if they can be found in a book or something. Once I learned, all of my blades are sharp all the time
Thanks for all the input guys. Love TG.
Call me "stupid."
Have to be honest- I can hit most blades on an accusharp maybe ten times. Touch them on ceramics, strop them- and they are shaving sharp in under 5 minutes a blade. I will take that in the field any day of the week! (I did it last night to prove it to myself)
I am probably just not patient enough. Have too many other things to do- like go shoot! :)
I will add: I think KME knife sharpener is a TREMENDOUS product. You could not find better construction, service, or ownership. I will continue to use it. But even one of the sharpening experts (I truly mean that- no sarcasm at all!) on this site took an hour to sharpen a Silver flame head for me- and it was never like its original state. I hunt with simplicity- I shoot trad because it was easier for me than techno stuff (Seriously!!) With that, a 1.5 ounce accusharp in my pocket will go with me anywhere in the world- and I have shaving sharp heads- anytime!
Dan