A Three-Step Routine to Keep Your Knives Sharp and Safe

A Three-Step Routine to Keep Your Knives Sharp and Safe

As we’ve often said, dull knives are dangerous knives, not to mention a pain to use when it’s time to cook. Keeping them sharp is surprisingly easy, and this guide from the folks at KnifePlanet is detailed and rich, but boils down to three simple steps: maintenance, honing, and eventually, sharpening.

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The guide walks you through the details of each step in fantastic detail—the kind you’ll need to bookmark and come back to instead of trying to power through the whole thing at once. The guide starts with a spirited defense of sharpening, something you probably don’t really need, but there are definitely people out there who think sharpening a knife is going to cause more damage than it’s worth. Oversharpening maybe, or doing it too often, but in general? Not so much.

From there we get into some solid knife maintenance tips, like learning how to keep a knife in good condition just by honing it, so you don’t run the risk of oversharpening. We’ve shown you how to hone a knife in the past, but there’s a video in the guide below to help you get started, or how to use a honing steel properly, especially if you’re not totally sure how to find a good angle and how to hold a honing steel (or ceramic rod, whichever you’re using.) The guide also shows you how to hone a knife with a fine grit water stone.

The second step is a simple one—learning how to tell when your knife doesn’t just need honing, but actual sharpening. It’s more difficult than you might think, but boils down to what Peter Nowlan calls the “Tomato Test:”

If your knife can still slice a tomato without the tomato bending, if it still easily breaks through that skin and glides through the tomato you are good, nice work. Now if it doesn’t, try taking out your hone again and steel the knife. DO NOT use more pressure than you are used to using, that is not going to make a difference, just use the same technique and then see how the knife feels on that tomato. When I slice a tomato I start at the heel of the knife and pull the blade toward the tip and by the time the knife has moved an inch it is in through the skin of the tomato.

The third step, of course, is actually sharpening your knife, either by finding someone to sharpen it professionally for you, or by learning to sharpen it yourself, ideally with a water stone.

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If you decide to take it to a sharpener, Nowlan has a few suggestions to help you get to know your sharpener first so you can trust your knives are in good hands. Hit the link below to read everything.

The 3-Step “Sharp Routine” To Keep Your Knives Sharp | KnifePlanet


via Lifehacker
A Three-Step Routine to Keep Your Knives Sharp and Safe

Turns Out Kylo Ren Was Way More Evil Than We Thought

Turns Out Kylo Ren Was Way More Evil Than We Thought

Kylo Ren has a lot of… anger issues in The Force Awakens. But even then, his path to the Dark Side in the movie was tinged with the hope that he could resolve the conflict within him. But apparently, it seems like Kylo was much further along that path than anyone realized. Spoilers ahead, if you’ve yet to watch The Force Awakens.

As part of ongoing coverage of The Force Awakens’ home release in the U.S. today, Entertainment Weekly has sat down with J.J. Abrams to uncover even more little details and tidbits about the film. Today, they discussed the scene where Kylo Ren slams his helmet down into a pool of ashes collected on a table in the interrogation room on Starkiller Base… and Abrams revealed what those ashes actually were:

The backstory is, that that table has the ashes of the enemies he’s killed. That moment was actually shot for, and meant to be used in, the scene where he was talking to the Vader mask.

I don’t know why, I’d always assumed that in a fit of rage over Rey, Kylo Ren had simply smashed the ashen husk of Darth Vader’s helmet to bits with his own headgear. But instead he just a pile of ashes from the burned bodies of people he’s killed? Kylo Ren should probably be appearing on whatever the Galaxy Far Far Away’s version of Hoarders is.

I mean, at least his grandfather had the class to get other people to dispose of the people he killed. He didn’t keep them around in dusty little pieces the Star Wars equivalent of a big bin in his quarters. Ben Solo, dude, that’s messed up.

via Gizmodo
Turns Out Kylo Ren Was Way More Evil Than We Thought

This Modular Garage Door Opener Has More Features Than Your Car

This Modular Garage Door Opener Has More Features Than Your Car

The garage door opener is one of those forgotten devices in your home that’s only ever noticed when it breaks. But Ryobi wants it to be the focal point of your garage workshop with modular upgrades that vastly expand its limited functionality.

As far as garage door openers go, Ryobi has ensured that it has all of the basic features consumers expect these days, like multiple remotes and control panels with passcode functionality, obstacle detection, a belt drive system that’s 20 percent quieter than the competition, and even connectivity to a smartphone app so you can open or close the door while away from home.

There’s even the option of attaching a Ryobi rechargeable battery, the same type you’d connect to a power tool, to keep the garage door opener running—for about 100 open and close cycles—during a power outage.

Where Ryobi’s garage door opener gets really interesting is the series of add-on modules—starting at $44—the company has created that add varying degrees of useful functionality to the overhead device.

This Modular Garage Door Opener Has More Features Than Your Car

Like the garage door opener itself, the adjustable fan and carbon monoxide detector modules provide passive functionality. They’re both useful, but equally forgettable. The attachable Bluetooth speaker might be handy if you find yourself spending a lot of time hanging out or working in your garage, and the 30-foot long retractable cord reel will let you power tools without extension cords lying all over the place.

But the most useful module—and the most compelling reason to upgrade your garage door opener to Ryobi’s new $248 option—is the Park Assist Module which uses a pair of ultra-bright lasers to make it easier to know when you’ve parked as close as you can to the wall of storage boxes in your garage without crushing them.

The one module that Ryobi forgot was a mini fridge add-on that lets you keep a few chilled drinks on hand for when you need to hide out in the garage, but there’s always time for the company to keep expanding the available modules.

[Ryobi via Gizmag]

via Gizmodo
This Modular Garage Door Opener Has More Features Than Your Car

Stop Teaching Programming, Start Teaching Computational Thought

Photo by Lucas SauganEducators want to teach programming to make a generation of coders, but even non-coders can benefit from learning computational thought.

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The post Stop Teaching Programming, Start Teaching Computational Thought appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.


via Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers
Stop Teaching Programming, Start Teaching Computational Thought

An insider’s handbook for IoT startups

iot-handbook Tips are everywhere. There’s an abundance of generic advice available for how to build teams and culture, how to fundraise, how to be productive, how to stay above the noise… But what about specific advice? Specific tips for what differentiates the leaders from the followers. And even more specifically, a guide to differentiate and succeed as a hardware startup. Read More


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An insider’s handbook for IoT startups

Still Using Folders to Organize Firefox Bookmarks? Try Tags

tag-bookmarks-firefox

The ability to use tags to easily search your bookmarks in Firefox has been available for a couple of years, though many people still do not take advantage of the feature. Tagging your bookmarks not only makes searching faster, but there are additional benefits to using them. Here are a few of great reasons to try tagging your bookmarks, along with how to set bookmark tags up and helpful tips for using them. Three Reasons to Use Bookmark Tags You may already have found a creative way to organize your bookmarks, making them easy to find when you need them. However, there are…

Read the full article: Still Using Folders to Organize Firefox Bookmarks? Try Tags

via MakeUseOf
Still Using Folders to Organize Firefox Bookmarks? Try Tags

Multimeter Basics: Measuring Voltage, Resistance, and Current

SS-Electronics-Multimeter-1A multimeter is an indispensable tool for working with electronics, and can give you a better idea of what’s going on inside your circuits.

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The post Multimeter Basics: Measuring Voltage, Resistance, and Current appeared first on Make: DIY Projects and Ideas for Makers.


via Make: DIY Projects, How-Tos, Electronics, Crafts and Ideas for Makers
Multimeter Basics: Measuring Voltage, Resistance, and Current

A Modern Knifemaker’s Badass Take on an Ancient Samurai Dagger

A Modern Knifemaker's Badass Take on an Ancient Samurai Dagger

Modern knives have something distinctly badass about them. Maybe it’s the materials. Maybe its the sleek ergonomic handles. But they also seem to be missing the sense of personality and specialness apparent in the work of ancient Japanese bladesmiths.

That’s why knifemaker Walter Sorrells decided to make a tanto—a type of short dagger—whose handle has all the qualities of a modern convenience, but whose blade was forged with some techniques borrowed from samurai-era Japan.

His two-part video explains the build from start to finish, and he drops some helpful tips for the amateur knifemakers in the audience. The finished blade is a one-of-a-kind piece fit for the guy who commissioned it: jiujitsu master and UFC coach John Danaher.

Part 1:

Part 2:

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via Gizmodo
A Modern Knifemaker’s Badass Take on an Ancient Samurai Dagger