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Hunters, fishermen, hikers, campers, homemakers, do-it-yourselfers-here at last is the book you've always wanted but could never find. John Juranitch shows even the lowest ranked beginner how to put the sharpest edge on the dullest tool, and also restore old tools for years of trouble-free service and wear. Everything you need to know is here:
The basic theory of sharpening Safe knife handling and use Handling a hone The best angle to sharpen at How to buy a knife-and kiss the gimmicks good-bye What to look for when buying hones Carbon steel versus stainless: finally, the real winner! How to tell if your knife is sharp Serrated edges: how good are they? For what? Sharpening the most popular blades in use today: including scissors, knives, axes, chain saws, adzes, folding knives, and plane blades - specific techniques, detailed "how-to" photographs and precise drawings How to build your own hollow grinder - instructions within! Step-by-step lessons featuring over 100 photographs and diagrams for ease and accuracy-and much more!
MEET THE PRO: John Juranitch has been a professional sharpening consultant since 1951, numbering among his clients Country Pride, Oscar Meyer, Swift & Co., Northern Seas, and others throughout the midwest and Canada. For his company, Razor Edge Systems, Inc., he makes frequent appearances at annual sportsmen's conventions and on televisions demonstrating the remarkable feat of sharpenig and shaving with a double-bitted ax-a show-stopping accomplishment for which Juranitch holds the Guinness World Record (14 minutes). --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Old book but very informative - shave your legs and slice that onion,
By Amateur Handiman and Athlete (DC Metro) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Razor Edge Book of Sharpening (Paperback)
I like this book. I only give it 4 stars cause it is old and not very pretty, but it is very useful. It gave me a new perspective on grinding and sharpening. I am sure there are others, but this works for me. The book outlines and discusses various thoughts on sharpening and picks up apart all kinds of traditional notions that you keep running into when researching sharpening on the web. Yes, it talks a lot about the meat cutting industry, but heck, few places demand better edges. Anything that works for their knives will work for anyone else that needs a sharp knife. It is an old book and you will not leave it on the living room table for decoration. It has basic old illustrations and cheap print on cheap paper, but that doesn't make the contents any less useful. He does promote his approach to sharpening and sells the hones etc. I bought the book and the company's 8 inch 2 hone kit (for dry grinding, nice, no oil, no water, just wash the hones in water after use). I have tried many things over the years to keep things sharp. I read the book a couple of times (which doesn't take long) and then went ahead and worked with the sharpening kit. I ground new edges and sharpened a half dozen kitchen knives, from a cheap Martha Stewart/KMart 3-inch paring knife to 8 inch chef knives (steel Wusthof and Sabatier carbon steel) and long thin dangerous looking Finnish fish fillet knives, and for fun a cheap basic thin bladed kitchen knife I found in the back of a cabinet. Every one of them now easily shaves hair from arms, legs, chin etc. They just glide smoothly through an onion, even with skin on. Very happily applying the same techniques to sharpening my chisels, planes, etc. too. Just make sure to grind until you get the burr on the coarse hone, and use a light touch on the fine hone.
Way cool. After reading the book and getting a couple of good hones you will be able to grind a new edge on any knife in 15-20 minutes. The edge is the kind that you will (carefully) show your friends while asking them if they have ever seen a sharp knife. "Be careful, I keep my knives sharp. No, I mean really sharp".
24 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Real Expertise on Getting Your Knives Really Sharp,
By "sabatked" (Tucson, AZ) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Razor Edge Book of Sharpening (Paperback)
This books slashes through the old wive's tails and misinformation in which the subject of knife sharpening has been known to be shrouded. Juranitch teaches with authority, and gives specific instructions which with a little practice make it fairly straight forward to get knives amazingly sharp. He also recommends the guides and hones manufactured by his own company. Though a little skeptical, I bought some equipment and found its performance to bear out his claims. Amazon has been indicating for quite a while that the publisher is out of stock, however the book is available from the Razor Edge Systems website. (Amazon frowns on URLs in reviews so I won't include it, but you can probably get it on your first guess. Otherwise use a search enginge.)
52 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Rough edge,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Razor Edge Book of Sharpening (Paperback)
This book is a disappointment. The folksy conversational tone cannot hide the weaknesses. Afer the introductory section of empty chit-chat you will be entertained or further irritated with endless anecdotes about the author's long and serious study of sharpening problems and how his intervention saved the day time after time. You will see a number of pictures Mary holding the knife or shaving the author. The illustrations are poor and crude (Figure 1-2 displays % - percent - when it means degree). Others' opinion and method of sharpening is "bull" and "bung." While the author is wondering why so much attention has been paid to hollow grinding, he proceeds to give a detailed description of how to build your own hollow grinder. The presentation is hodge-podge, with a section on knives followed by a discussion of scissors, then back to knives again. And if after all the "theory" of sharpening you still cannot tell whether your knife edge is sharp, well, he has the solution: just buy his edge tester. If your blade is still dull, you may want to try the "advanced" method of sharpening - full-proof, of course - with his special guide. For the most part, this book is a ... self-advertisement and product promotion. The author may be a good sharpener, but this book is a disappointment.
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