The Carter-Stanley Method of Sharpening: Chapter 3 The Extended Method

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  • Опубліковано 5 гру 2019
  • For years Murray's Blade Sharpening Fundamentals DVDs have helped teach you how to sharpen your blades. Now we're bringing those same fundamentals to you, in a newly updated series--for free!
    Murray Carter and Hap Stanley will cover the extended method of kitchen knife sharpening. We recommend starting this series with Chapter 1; Theory, and completing Chapter 2 The Carter-Stanley Method of Sharpening: Chapter 2: Expedient Method before viewing Chapter 3.
    To learn more about Carter Cutlery;
    Visit us at cartercutlery.com
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    Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter for daily knife photos and videos
    And remember to always...
    Stay sharp!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 90

  • @blongmoua315
    @blongmoua315 4 роки тому +52

    Your old King Stone do the job just fine

    • @twatmunro
      @twatmunro 2 роки тому +2

      At the end of the day, it's just abrasives removing steel. Some cut faster, some cut slower but you're not going to get it magically sharper just by using a more expensive stone.

  • @firemtnglass
    @firemtnglass Рік тому +3

    I notice it got pretty sharp when the bandaid appeared. Nice video

  • @Epmd419
    @Epmd419 4 роки тому +4

    It's absolutely meditative. I enjoying sharpening just as much- maybe even more- than working with the knife. Great, thorough video. Much appreciated.

  • @kollegenmusik
    @kollegenmusik 4 роки тому +16

    George Lucas just joined in and helped out Murray in this knife sharpening quest

    • @savedge666
      @savedge666 3 роки тому +2

      Seriously. Look at these obiwan ass looking nerds. Lol.

  • @Nebulax123
    @Nebulax123 4 роки тому +3

    Murray: Bruce Rugg here. Over the last 50 years I have found that often instead of making the edge more obtuse I make it even thinner for people that are rough on edges as long as the edge can handle the angle without deforming. By making it thicker you add to the force they must use to cut and they put even more pressure on the edge increasing the damage. When I thin it I may add an almost microscopic micro bevel right on the edge just to give the very cutting edge a bit more stability. I have had great success with that method. Also in rope cutting experiments we did the thinner profiles would cut cleanly for a longer period of time. I know that sounds counter intuitive but give it a shot my friend.

    • @CarterCutlery
      @CarterCutlery  4 роки тому +1

      Hey thanks for your feedback Bruce, see you at Blade Show next year.--Murray

  • @chrismonroe6691
    @chrismonroe6691 4 роки тому +1

    Enjoying this

  • @dieslesmith9517
    @dieslesmith9517 4 роки тому +1

    Love these videos. Thank you much. I like those spyderco knives i think they are awesome

  • @heni63
    @heni63 3 роки тому

    Thank you!!

  • @jamesbarisitz4794
    @jamesbarisitz4794 4 роки тому +4

    Excellent tutorial gents. The Carter Classic came out spectacular! 👍

  • @Mrplacedcookie
    @Mrplacedcookie 10 місяців тому

    Thanks

  • @victorfranca17
    @victorfranca17 2 роки тому

    I watch this from time to time, just to pass the time. When it comes to contamination. My whole pond is one blob of grit and metal. and at the end? all I get is a nice brushed finish, its fine and practical. still shinny and the edge always has bite. The abrasives on nanohone do seem premium and soft. not clogging up too quickly, which is nice. I have all the shaptons... Just do a knife sharpening of the week. No need to update the instructional. But just show current designs being finished. At the end of the day, its all about the knives! It will draw new people into the scene. Got me into it.

  • @waynepollard7823
    @waynepollard7823 4 роки тому +3

    Love this series, very well done

  • @johnnyboydianno
    @johnnyboydianno 4 роки тому +17

    That must of killed Murray watching that stone getting flattened lol

    • @rowanfernsler9725
      @rowanfernsler9725 4 роки тому +3

      He knows how much he’s getting payed, he doesn’t worry about it. But his face says if all.

    • @cameron3525
      @cameron3525 3 роки тому +1

      He probably lost around 15 sharpenings just by how he flattened it...

  • @DASHTINOV
    @DASHTINOV 2 роки тому

    Always thank polit people in Japan = assist , thin , profile , polish then joint the knife . thank you brothhers.

  • @roylerroycerickson
    @roylerroycerickson 4 роки тому

    Thanks for this Murray and nano hone guy really seems to have helped my edges do you have any more pointers for sharpenning the belly and tip area i find that the bevel seem wider at the tip when I’m done and not as sharp as the rest of the knife?

  • @sl4983
    @sl4983 8 місяців тому +1

    Which ones are the ones for escaping laminate side car glass, be aware ewe toob may hide responses if they're too clear. Try leaving out vowels.

  • @johnptc
    @johnptc 4 роки тому +2

    closer to perfection :)

  • @feacsdoctor8817
    @feacsdoctor8817 2 роки тому +4

    Why don't you compare your old method to the new method? And do a comparison on a microscopic level to show the difference between the pair. See if it really makes a $1000 difference

  • @imamsetyawan3119
    @imamsetyawan3119 4 роки тому +3

    Nice Video.. Very educating and interesting... but I’m wondering on sharpening the secondary edge.. some Beauty Knife like honyaki finished with their beauty.. some knife with damascus pattern with their beauty.. Doesn’t the sharpening secondary edge can damage their beauty aspect even if you polished with the higher grit...?

    • @rowanfernsler9725
      @rowanfernsler9725 4 роки тому

      It will definitely damage the looks of it but it will keep it performing at 100%. The truth is, you will almost never need to thin a knife unless it is a Sushi knife, one you are making, it comes too thick, or it has a massive chip.

  • @slipshodaverage844
    @slipshodaverage844 4 роки тому +6

    I was wondering if you could expand upon the advantage of Joining over lightly running the edge over wood to take the burr off? Thank you.

    • @rowanfernsler9725
      @rowanfernsler9725 4 роки тому +1

      Removing the Burr is extremely important so that a knife is sharper, and has a more durable edge

    • @corpssnare
      @corpssnare 3 роки тому +2

      @@rowanfernsler9725 but why is "jointing" on a stone more effective than knocking the burr off on a piece of wood?

    • @draganpastrovic2157
      @draganpastrovic2157 3 роки тому

      @@corpssnare yes wood is better ffs, even Murray was showing how to just pass the blade with its own weight through some soft wood.

    • @EngineersPerspective701
      @EngineersPerspective701 3 роки тому +1

      @@corpssnare it’s the difference between ripping and cutting. The stone cuts the burr off cleaner vs the wood leaves a ragged edge and isn’t guaranteed to actually remove the burr.

    • @user-so6fu1ir3v
      @user-so6fu1ir3v 2 роки тому +1

      @@corpssnare The wood doesn't actually knock off the burr it just rolls it all on one side and weakens it, so that subsequent stropping can get rid of it easier
      What he is doing on the stone is not only rolling but cutting the burr

  • @gashosimon2678
    @gashosimon2678 4 роки тому +3

    that drag @24 got your finger didn't it? been there... great content!

    • @drmatt357
      @drmatt357 3 роки тому

      I didn't see the cut but did see the edit with all the sudden there was a band aid.

  • @drmatt357
    @drmatt357 4 роки тому +1

    Nicely done. Won’t finishing with a stropping stroke pull another foil?

    • @codysykes5568
      @codysykes5568 3 роки тому

      I found that it helps to finish with damp newspaper in strops to keep that from happening; also I take a wet q-tip and let the edge barely pull across it to get any excess material from the blade.

  • @ottohonkala6861
    @ottohonkala6861 4 роки тому +1

    Its always interesting when two experts get together.....only thing here is that Murray knows sharpening is just the final part of the big deal....

  • @johnbailley4468
    @johnbailley4468 4 роки тому +5

    WHY NOT DO THE JOINTING ON THE LEATHER STRAP? sorry about the caps.

    • @kappablanca5192
      @kappablanca5192 4 роки тому

      John Bailley jointing removes the burr and strengthens the edge.

  • @ericrankin4666
    @ericrankin4666 Рік тому

    So does Murray not use leather strops for stropping? I usually sharpen pocket knives and cheap kitchen knives once 8n a while and I’m new to seeing someone “strop” on the stone. Also it seems like when I polish my blades they never have that bite and don’t slice into the skin when doing the 3 finger test of sharpness .. ~cheers!

  • @jameskelly5375
    @jameskelly5375 4 роки тому +1

    Hi there, quick question: Even after the 2 micron polish on the secondary edge @ 33:50, that edge is looking quite rough. Would additional polishes on a high grit waterstone (~8000) give it more of a finished look, maybe mirror-like? Thanks.

  • @dennis2146
    @dennis2146 3 місяці тому

    If the knife blade is made properly and thinned from the beginning as I assume a Murray Carter knife blade will be from the factory, then why is more thinning necessary?

  • @Richard-Seekingwulf
    @Richard-Seekingwulf 3 роки тому +3

    I discovered your station a few days ago and I have watched many of your videos since then and I thought you said that you didn't really care for ceramic stones, but I went on your website and it seems that most everything that you're selling is ceramic. When the first and second sharpening video you were using the kingstone and showing me how I can do things very inexpensively by using just a board and rags to support the stone over a sink or that rubber bucket. So I'm confused now because I see all of these very high-priced items.

  • @shrimpslushi5781
    @shrimpslushi5781 3 роки тому +1

    Anyone have any opinions on these stones ?

  • @joeratliff7760
    @joeratliff7760 3 роки тому

    I love nu metal 🤘🏼

  • @tharyder
    @tharyder 4 роки тому

    Yeah, but how long will that edge hold if you only use it for cutting vegetables on a plastic cutting board? Nobody talks about that... , and how to maintain in before you have to go back to the stones?

  • @ChristopherSalisburySalz
    @ChristopherSalisburySalz 2 роки тому +1

    For a minute I thought you had just gotten out of the shower! 😂

  • @gunfighter2012
    @gunfighter2012 3 роки тому

    24:22 no band aid. 24:29 BAND AID! Oliver Stone where are you when we need you.

  • @mekore
    @mekore 2 роки тому

    how can an urushi master this into sharpening😅??? He looked genuinely obsessed lol

  • @dris9274
    @dris9274 3 роки тому

    whi they are wearing bathrobe? cause of the water?

    • @zube410
      @zube410 3 роки тому

      Murrey Carter is the 17th generation yoshimoto bladesmith. He trained as a bladesmith under a master Japanese Smith for years. He literally wears a gi for a basically identical reason that karate-ka wear them. It was the uniform he was trained to do this particular task in. Like wearing a shop apron, or any other work uniform, he wears a traditional Japanese bladesmith to uniform because that is the job at which he trained to master level.

    • @dris9274
      @dris9274 3 роки тому

      @@zube410
      ok, thx you, interesting

    • @jamessethmoore
      @jamessethmoore 3 роки тому

      Bwahahaha!!!

  • @dieslesmith9517
    @dieslesmith9517 4 роки тому +2

    What are those robes that you are wearing?

    • @shadyeskimo
      @shadyeskimo 4 роки тому +1

      Japanese traditional sharpening atire, is my guess.

    • @garychandler4296
      @garychandler4296 4 роки тому +2

      Lookin like bedbuddies?

    • @westcoastwarriorsarchive7929
      @westcoastwarriorsarchive7929 4 роки тому +1

      traditional japanese clothing called a kimono

    • @edwilderness
      @edwilderness 4 роки тому +1

      These kimonos seem to be the Japanese equivalent of aprons: something to wear while doing messy work.

    • @broken1965
      @broken1965 4 роки тому

      Nice band-aid little wild with the sharps

  • @TOGITOGI
    @TOGITOGI 4 роки тому +1

    まず、着物の袖をまくって、腕時計を外して、前掛けをつけた方がいいと思います。

  • @johnathondavis5208
    @johnathondavis5208 3 роки тому +2

    It is a requisite to wear an old bathrobe to achieve that edge? It is like guys going to the range...cannot shoot without wearing "tactical clothing"....

  • @arncj18
    @arncj18 2 роки тому

    so that's about JIS1000 grit

  • @JDO358
    @JDO358 3 роки тому +2

    24:28 even a pro makes mistakes. Cut his finger..

  • @dominickmaone
    @dominickmaone 2 роки тому

    If I didn’t know how to sharpen watching these videos would make it worse.

  • @MrEric0822
    @MrEric0822 3 роки тому +1

    Why do you guys wear karate robes when sharpening a knife?

    • @zube410
      @zube410 3 роки тому +1

      Murrey Carter is the 17th generation yoshimoto bladesmith. He trained as a bladesmith under a master Japanese Smith for years. He literally wears a gi for a basically identical reason that karate-ka wear them. It was the uniform he was trained to do this particular task in. Like wearing a shop apron, or any other work uniform, he wears a traditional Japanese bladesmith to uniform because that is the original job at which he trained to master level.

  • @twatmunro
    @twatmunro 2 роки тому

    Not sure how Murray claims ownership of this method. At the end of the day, it's just rubbing the edge of a blade up and down on stone. The same way knives have been sharpened throughout history. I love the cabinets though.

  • @BlackTalon53
    @BlackTalon53 4 роки тому +11

    Good god those kimonos make the video almost unwatchable because they make one cringe so hard.

    • @garychandler4296
      @garychandler4296 4 роки тому +1

      Ya, some type of play acting...

    • @kappablanca5192
      @kappablanca5192 4 роки тому +3

      Japanese workmans robe

    • @zube410
      @zube410 3 роки тому +2

      @@garychandler4296 play acting? What part of a master level Japanese bladesmith wearing a traditional Japanese work uniform is play acting? That is a truly ridiculous assertion. Sorry, my comments probably a little over the top, but if ever there was a good reason to be wearing this particular uniform, it has got to be someone who took the time to train to master level in a form of Japanese craftsmanship...

    • @ghidfg
      @ghidfg 3 роки тому

      @@zube410 interesting. I bet anything else would feel awkward.

  • @ashen11x22
    @ashen11x22 3 роки тому +2

    WTF happened to the no BS King stones, paper towel and scrap 2x4 sink bridge ?! This video is such an infomercial it’s ridiculous. I feel sorry for anyone dishing out such money for sharpening.