Spyderco Ceramic Stone Grits
Spyderco has a wide selection of spyderco ceramic stone grits to serve your knife sharpening purposes.
Start your job on a very dull or beat up blade with the course stone.
Work this knife blade over until you get the form of the blade back to where you want it. The idea of the course grit stone is to reshape a blade. It is perfect for repairing a chip or even the worse scenario, putting a tip back on a snapped blade.
Spyderco ceramic stone grits also can provide you with a medium grit; which is more of precision type grit than the course and used to start putting an edge back on your knife. Work this over pretty good on the medium grit stone. You probably won't achieve a razor edge but can get pretty close on a medium grit stone.
You don't want to stop with the medium grit stone until you have a pretty good edge put on your knife. A lot of people will sharpen too little and move on to the fine grit to find their efforts fruitless.
The fine grit is your last stop when using Spyderco ceramic stone grits. The fine grit does very little to the edge of the blade. What you are doing here is going from very sharp to extremely sharp. With a Spyderco fine grit ceramic stone, you will be able to put that razor edge on your blade capable of shaving an arm.
That's all there is to it when it comes to choosing the right stone for the job. Remember, to repair a chipped blade or broken tip, use the course grit Spyderco stone. To put a sharp blade on your knife after wear and tear, use the medium grit. Finally, to put that razor sharp edge on your knife, go with the fine grit.