Thanks Chris ,I really wanted to see what you thought of it because you were one of the people who saw it's original condition. It is super sharp now as well.
I fixed the nonbeveled side the same way a machine shop would do a set of heads.
I removed enough metal so it was perfectly flat again. It bit my thumb though while I was hand sanding. Not only did I slice my thumb open I also ground some INFI dust into the wound in the process.
You have not been around for a while Chris ,have you been on vacation?
For anyone doing this themselves ,you have to make the flat sides perfectly flat by using a piece of flat stock with sandpaper on it. It is a hell of a lot easier to do this at 60 grit where you remove metal rather fast than forgetting that step until 230 grit<img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/doh.gif" alt="" /> and having to sand forever to remove a tiny little divot or go back and do it all over again<img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/banghead.gif" alt="" />
We just had a wicked summer hail and thunderstorm like you get on the prairies every once in a while. Our big plastic garbage can with the wheels actually started floating/rolling down the street. It got 3 houses away before we caught it.