Re: Good guy but sharp as a bowling ball
TomD
For a wide variety of tools the Leonard Lee video is good. Maybe there is some stuff on the LV site.
for chisels it can be hard to keep them indexed by hand. Using a jig is a good thing. Unfortunately sometimes the Japanese chisels don't fit all the jigs. I am a big believer in jigless sharpening, but I own a few jigs and use them for a variety of things. When you are learning, they are like training wheels. You can try to sharpen a chisel first by hand, if it doesn't work out you can switch to the jig. Often you can retouch an edge a few times but then the chisel looses a little shape, and the jig will help you get back. So I see it as a teaching and continuity guide for learners.
The basic deal is to sharpen it long enough on your 800 that you get a burr on the back, across the whole edge. The remove that by rubbing the back flat on your finishing stone long enough to loose the burr. Sharpen the bevel on your finishing stone until you get a burr, then remove that, and go back and forth a bit. Should be razor sharp.
The LV jig has one feature that will help a beginner, or anyone. There is a knob that will allow you to steepen the angle by a degree. So once you have your burr on the 800, you go up one degree, and you hone at that angle. It is a great version of the micro bevel, because it is so slight it does not affect edge geometry, or make the 800 step difficult to index. Again, I prefer not to be jig Dependant, but they have their place.
Almost all problems that result in no edge, once you have the right gear, are related to not getting the job done. The one way you can know you got the job done is if after working a grit you have a full width burr. As you gain experience you will not need so much feedback, but it is an easy way to know what is up. If you sharpen free hand, and do not raise a burr or get an edge, something was wrong. Maybe you where off angle, or the geometry is dubbed, etc...
One way to get better edge registration when you do not have a jig is to work the tool sideways, since normally there is more bearing in that direction. Dubbing occurs for gross errors, but it also happens when you micro tip the chisel due to it hanging as you start to move it. This is where the lateral move on the stone reduces some problem.
Practice!