Well, for me, after going down the first 1 to 1 1/2 inches on the inside of a bowl, I use a shear scrape to clean things up, and that is part of why I did a video just on shear scraping. A NRS works very well across the bottom of the bowl since there is no uphill/downhill grain in the bottom. Once you start coming up the side of the bowl, the NRS is still a scraper, and it will leave some torn grain in the uphill parts of the bowl. How much tear out there is depends on the wood. On soft maples, it is considerable. On some thing like madrone or pear or dogwood, tear out is very minimal. This is why I prefer a shear scrape from the transition to the rim of the bowl as my finish cut. Some times the gouges seem to work, some times they don't.
As for the entry cut on the rim, I am tending to start more with the flutes at maybe 1 o'clock rather than at 3. The gouge doesn't want to skate as much that way as it does if the flutes are at 3. How much it skates depends on your entry angle, which means it should be parallel to the outside of the bowl. I start inside the bowl and adjust my bevel angle till it just starts to cut. Then pull the gouge out and angle it maybe 5 degrees more so that you are aiming slightly to the outside of the bowl and very gently start the cut.
As for how sharp, the discussions still go on and on. Sharper/higher grit = cleaner cut. Coarser grit = cleaner cut. More teeth = going dull faster. Fewer teeth = going dull faster. John Lucas did a test with some ebony and couldn't really see much difference between the cuts. That may have been the wood, but I don't have much experience with turning ebony. I had some punky big leaf maple that I was turning once, and there was considerable tear out. I took a gouge that was sharpened on a 1000 grit CBN wheel, and that cleaned up almost all of the tear out. I am guessing that most of the time, the 180 grit is all you need, but some times the finer edge does have an advantage. As near as I can tell, a 1000 grit ground bowl gouge seems to go dull faster than a 180 grit gouge. I did try a skew, and yes, I do use them some times, on some green big leaf maple that had some nice curl in it. I sharpened up to 8000 grit on stones, then stropped on 800, then 8000, then 15000 grit pastes, and made some cuts. The peeling cuts still left some tear out, and my other cuts did seem to leave a much cleaner surface, even with my limited experience on the skew. I don't have any dry big leaf maple to try this with.
I have never understood the idea that a smaller gouge will leave a cleaner surface than a bigger one. Just seems to me it is like Yogi Berra said, "it is 90% mental and 10% in your head". I have tried it some and can't see or feel any difference. It could just be me.
robo hippy