S
Shotgun
Guest
Maybe my experience would help here. I bought the bark river kit that has a wood backed leather strop(on both sides) and green and black compound. I rub the stick of compound into the leather until I have an even coat all over. Meaning thick enough I can't see the tan leather underneath though can still see the texture of the leather. If that makes sense. I then strop away on the black(course) until I get a burr on one side then do the other side. Flip the strop over and do alternating light pressure strokes on the green(fine). I've used it several times without cleaning or adding more compound and has continued to work fine. My knives are sharper then they've ever been. I sharpen both scandi and convex edges on it and it works fine for both though you may develope a slight convex on the scandi. I wouldn't recomend it if you want to keep a true scandi grind but I think that the slight, very slight, convexing of the edge gives it a micro bevel type quality that strengthens the edge. Something I think is necessary when dealing with hardwoods.
For cleaning I've heard that the waterless soaps you can find in auto parts stores works but I've never tried it. My strop hasn't gotten to the point of cleaning it. One brand name you can find here is Gojo if that helps. One thing I can say for it is that it works wonders for getting stains out of clothing. Smells like crap though.
For cleaning I've heard that the waterless soaps you can find in auto parts stores works but I've never tried it. My strop hasn't gotten to the point of cleaning it. One brand name you can find here is Gojo if that helps. One thing I can say for it is that it works wonders for getting stains out of clothing. Smells like crap though.
