Editing Charnley Forest Hones

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Charnley Forest hones are very fine and quite hard. Some rate them at around 15k to 20k. They are very slow cutters, and some users suggest as many as 100 to 200 laps to finish. Some recommend the use of oil instead of water, but not all oils are suitable. It seems slurry stones are not traditionally used, as they are typically not found in boxes designed to hold larger Charnley Forest stones. Lapping a Charnley Forest stone with a low grit lapping stone can remove the polished surface which is desired for the best result polishing edges. Lapping leaves a matte finish, which will become more glossy through use or by lapping with higher grit abrasives.
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Charnley Forest hones are very fine and quite hard. Some rate them at around 15k to 20k. They are very slow cutters, some suggesting as many as 100 to 200 laps to finish. Some highly recommend the use of oil, but not all oils are to be used, some are to be avoided. Slurry stones do not seem to have been used traditionaly. When freshly lapped with low grit the stone will lack the polished surface which is desired for the best result polishing edges. A lapped charnley with a matte finish will become more glossy through use.
  
These stones are often irregular in shape/cut, and their coloration varies. They are commonly a green-grey mix with spots or streaks of red/pink/purple/black. Some are an unfigured grey-green. Charnley Forest stones are commonly found in simple wooden boxes, but the same is true for many other vintage stones, so a box of this type does not guarantee an Charnley Forest.
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They are often irregular in shape/cut. Their colouration varies. Commonly a green-grey with spots or streaks of red/pink/purple/black. Some are an unfigured grey-green. To find a Charnley Forest hone in a simple wooden one-peice box with one-peice lid seems common, but other stones are also found in such boxes.
  
 
[[image:Charnley-02.jpg]]
 
[[image:Charnley-02.jpg]]

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