
Originally Posted by
Evil D
Ok. School me. How the heck do i sharpen this tiny little miniscule blade on my Edge Pro? I don't fully understand what he's talking about in the DVD about sharpening serrations either. Not only do i suck at sharpening serrations, but dealing with them on a hawkbill blade is a whole different matter. I also have my first Spydie, a SE Native that i would like to (finally) learn to sharpen and enjoy.
Or, would it be easier to just go buy a cheap diamond cone rod at the local knife shop and work at it freehand? If so, please explain. I'm retarded when it comes to sharpening serrations. I've watched a bunch of videos and i just can't get an edge that's ANYWHERE near what i get with PE, and that really matters to me. I expect one of my serrations to push cut paper if possible. Am i asking too much?
I think you are asking too much. I tried and gave up being able to slice paper with a serrated edge on any spot on the edge. Getting every spot on the edge just takes too much time and perfection. What I am happy with in a serrated edge is being about to easily cut through thick rope with a single cut using one slicing motion from heel to tip. Then I'm happy. Since I don't need serrated edges I'm really happy because I don't enjoy sharpening them. If I had more skill they would be a SHEER JOY to sharpen with excellent results.
The only serrated knife I care about is my long kitchen bread knife. For it I use Ben's video method. You have to lower the angle of the EP as low as possible. That includes using a piece of cardboard or something under the spine to raise it. This lowers the angle the stone hits the edge. Get it as low as you can and NOT hit the side of the blade. Sharpen the knife on the back side just like a plain edge until the entire serration is being hit by the stone. The tip all the way to the bottom of each serration. Then use the cone sharpener to remove the burr from the other side inside each serration. It doesn't have to be perfect like a plain edge for it to perform well. You can also use the profile 701 Spyderco stones to remove the burr. They are perfect, or the Sharpmaker stones. I only have the 701 stones. They are discontinued so getting a set soon is wise if you want them. They are perfect for serrated edges even if you don't want to use the EP method. I find I use mainly the fine one. They are worth it also because they are about as versitile a set as I've ever seen for all types of edges. I'll sell you my set for $500. Let me know when the check is mailed. 
Very short blades Ben shows using a block that raises the blade high enough so the handle can be over the blade table. I have sharpened my Ladybug, Jester and Manbug without any block like that. I make my own blocks to hold the knife blade perfectly still but that's a different thing. I've never needed his blocks yet. It was a little tedious using the EP on my bug though but I did it. My son laughed at me for taking the time to get the bug so sharp. I like to carry it sometimes because I get a laugh when anyone sees it, then a "oh man" when they see it actually cuts small things just fine. 
If you do want a diamond cone shape sharpener I highly recommend one from DMT. I'm sure there are other good ones but I have 100% faith in their products. I have several of their sharpeners. Great customer service also from what I've needed. I have the cone sharpener that goes with the aligner and it is quality. I also have one I got a Lowe's and it is nice because it is very coarse for when you need a coarse one. DMT only has the fine grit and of course that's all you need if you keep up the sharpening of the edge and don't let it get too dull.
Jack
MY CURRENT EDC
Sage4: Now with black linen (micarta) scales, stonewashed blade and bolsters
Manbug (G-10): Now has camo-desert kirinite scales, ZDP-189 blade ground to a Jester-like spine, stonewashed blade and bolsters
Fenix LD01 (single AAA flashlight) clips to Manbug FOB