----------------------------------------------------------------------
83 x 122 x 35 mm 868g Hard, sticky, fine grinder grade
It is hand-mined, hand-split, and carefully refined into a board by reading the grain. Ideal solution for changing the cross-sectional shape of striations on high-speed steel systems etc.
The mining is done by heavy machinery, the cutting is done by diamond tombstone cutting, and the whetstone labeled "Iyo Meito" is a counterfeit and unauthorized product, so we are not involved in it. Our company is the only company with the "Iyo Meito" issue from around 2007. For this purpose, the inscriptions except for the small koppa are handwritten. We are unable to respond to inquiries regarding "Iyo Meito" which is not included in our ore processing or production.
Trachymodified rhyolite/andesite from Iyo City, Ehime Prefecture, Japan. #1,000-5,000 class. The harder it is, the finer it tends to be. The remaining hardness and specific viscosity are the strongest. Neutral and rust resistant unlike other Iyo Toyama. If you wake up with diamond #400 or less, the grinding performance will recover well. Recommended by Kyonakura. Because of the round bottom continuous striations, it has a long cutting time of about 70% threshold, and the artificial grinding wheel grain size ratio makes it difficult to become tasteless and mirror-like, making it easy to bring out the contrast derived from differences in forge tangent lines, materials, and carbon content.
The blacker the stone, the harder and finer the stone tends to be. If it is hard, it will lose its self-sharpening ability, so depending on your purpose and level of skill, you should continue sharpening while performing Kyonagakake each time.
Natural whetstones from Iyo Province are said to have already been distributed in the Seto Inland Sea during the Kofun period, and are famous as masters of the whetstone industry in one of the oldest and largest igneous rock systems in the world, said to be over 1,500 years old.
Our country's precious mineral resources had the potential to completely change the nation and the nation.
The unique iron sand metallurgy, which developed due to the lack of iron ore and had a significantly lower yield, and the fact that it was the last to develop because it was located on a remote island in the Far East, were conditions that were fatal to the creation of the Iron Age civilization, almost like losing a limb.
Looking at our history and tradition, we can confirm that consumables that allow us to process harder and more tenacious iron products as we wish are our country's most famous abrasive resource.
Until the 19th century, the performance of natural whetstones dominated the development of ironware.
Despite its poor location in terms of architecture, it is home to one of the world's oldest and largest wooden buildings.
Japanese swords are the result of extraordinary skill in ironware. The world of samurai, who risked their lives on a single swing, lasted for 700 years.
Despite being a latecomer to the country, it had already invented the world's best iron products in the Middle Ages, and today it is known as a manufacturing nation.
The Iron Age lasted from prehistoric times until the middle of the Heisei era. In other words, the power to draw out iron was itself a working medium that weaved the maturation of not only manufacturing, but also culture and the nation.
The precious stone resource, which is irreplaceable and precious, and overflowing with uniqueness and truth, has pushed back against the many layers of adversity faced by iron.
If we estimate Japan's various resources based on the values of the modern era, when oil and nuclear power were of no value, we would say that Japan is a resource-rich nation.
The strength that can only be gained through the process of pushing back against lack and inconvenience adds depth to history and tradition, and lights up the soul.