Good to see you putting the ol' Feon through the paces Kevin!
Tonights shave was a shave test of a honing on jamespasini69's Goldedge. When she showed up in the mail, after taking a look at the bevel, It was discovered to have the very slightest twist in the spine.  An 
exaggerated illustration drawn by myself (sorry, I ate all my crayons...) will attempt to demonstrate what I'm talking about here:
![[IMG]](proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi434.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fqq61%2Fentropy1049DR650%2FMobile%2520Uploads%2FA106E74B-A419-4463-921F-37FE50BA0C52.jpg&hash=b1b21ff3edda61b9c9753c86aa2666e7) 
 
About 75% of the "problem razors" I've honed seem to suffer from this same affliction. It's about the first thing I look for after I check sharpie wear after those first three strokes or so when starting to set a bevel. The problem is easy enough to fix, but you must proceed with caution. Applying gentle but constant pressure to the spine in a counter twist while frequently checking your bevel with the sharpie and about three strokes. James' was just a wee, wee bit out of center. Not enough to be obvious, just enough to cause problems.
Once the bevel checking was indicating even honing along both sides of the edge, I set the bevel with a 1K Naniwa SS, proceeding with pyramid honing to 3K, 8K, and 12k (all Naniwa SS). I then finished on the Suehiro Gokumyo 20 K, which is in my humble opinion capable of producing results second only to a world class Nakayama as a finisher, and is substantially faster and easier to use than that J-Nat. This was followed by 10 strokes on .5 micron diamond on felt, 10 strokes on .25 micron CrOx on webbing, 30 strokes on the suede secondary strop of a Kanayama, and finally 60 strokes on the Kanayama 90,000 primary cordovan strop. Result: HHT4-5 along the razors entire edge.
Final result: what a sweet, sharp razor. James, you're going to really enjoy this razor, she's a honey!
![[IMG]](proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi434.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fqq61%2Fentropy1049DR650%2FMobile%2520Uploads%2F35376D5D-7BF7-4FA0-B447-733E8D48BF2B.jpg&hash=221eea308d15309b974714e8a1b2bfea)
Click to expand...