
I like using the Gatco knife sharpening kit my wife bought me.
Can hone the blade's angle to perfection and can also repair nicks.
I bolt the blade into the jig and use the 19-degree slot. This slot works great on my Buck knives.
Then pull the rod out on the course stone. Those little rods extend and it took me a while to discover. Makes it easier to do the work if you know that.
I will work on one side of the blade pulling the stone at a 90-degree angle to it. Long, slow strokes with just a bit of pressure on the stone. NEVER push the stone into the blade. ALWAYS pulling it at right angles to the blade.
Work on each side of the blade the same amount of strokes.
Switch to the next less course stone and repeat this process until you get to the fine stone and then you're almost done but not quite.
At that point I use that leather strap. I'll loop one end over a door-knob or something like that and then strop the blade a couple hundred times on each side. My Buck knife is sharp enough to dry-shave.
Have cleaned hundreds of mallard ducks with that knife. I cleaned ducks for money at the club the year before last.
Sharp knife makes the work go a lot quicker.
Posted picture of my blade so you can see how it appears to be factory sharpened. That Gatco tool makes it so you don't tear up the blade while sharpening and end up with 'perfection'. I like perfect.
