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The Edge. The business end of a knife or cutting tool. The perfect edge occurs at the intersection of two planes, which are the sides of the knife that intersect each other; the perfect edge formed by the two planes would a one dimensional line of zero radius. This is just not attainable, because the planes are made of something whose molecule has a radius, and where they intersect an edge is formed by at least a single molecule that has a radius. In practical terms, this ain't a going to happen. Maybe in a lab, maybe. But there is a downside, it is a fragile edge that won't hold up and will round over to the point that it is less sharp but more durable.

That is the scientific claptrap. Our best edge is going to be rounded to the point that you and I can see it with a loupe. I have four loupes, a 5x, a 10x, a 20x, and a 30x, and some comparator scopes that go way beyond that. If I take a brand new Irwin Utility knife blade out of the box and look at the edge under 5x, I can see the edge. At 10x the edge is obvious, and a 30x it looks like a landing strip. Quality scalpels are somewhat better, but still a highway at 30x. Quality of the plane grinds (facets, bevels) and polish are an important in attaining a small radius, but included angle of the edge (plane 1 degrees from centerline + plane 2 degrees from centerline) is as important a factor. The size of the radius will increase with the size of the included angle. Unfortunately, the durability (how much strength or metal is behind the edge) decreases with the decrease in included angle. We are always fighting the metal to get the best balance between edge radius and durability.

Utility knives, razors, scalpel,s and anything of that ilk sacrifice durability for sharpness. Sharpen often or put in a new disposable blade. So edge angles are going to be minimal, but these things will really cut; for a while.

So what is the proper angle for a knife edge? I feel a range of 20° to 50° is about right, but covers a lot of territory. I guess some examples might be appropriate.

Bench Knife or skiver -- 20° to 25°, maybe even 30°

Shoe Utility Knife -- 25° to 30°

Pocket Knife -- 25° to 30°

Kitchen Knife -- 25° to 35°

Head Knife -- 20° to 25°

Wood Chisel -- 25° to 35° depending on use

Planer Blade -- 40°

Axe -- 40° to 50°

Lawnmower Blade -- 90° or a bit less

Art

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

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I would like to also see something about kitchen and butcher knives. Having a dull kitchen knife is akin to a dull head knife. Useless, dangerous and frustrating. And we all need to do something with that delicious meat that used to be wrapped in the skins we use!

Since an edge is the intersection of two "planes", we could call it "The Plane Truth". LOL.

  • Moderator
Posted

Kitchen and butcher knives, in my experience, run the spectrum of knives, from paring knives to cleavers. Also the use that these knives get is anywhere from home kitchen to the commercial processing facility.

The average home kitchen knife can be sharpened from 15° or less, all the way up to 40°. The average chef type knife will be in the 25° to 30° range for the "gourmet home chef", although some of the Japanese blades hold 15° pretty well. Edge life varies both with use and care. If you go into the average home kitchen, they might as well be using cold chisels to cut things as the knives are usually in abysmal condition.

Commercial Kitchens are worse at times than home kitchens. For the type of work they do, they usually go an inordinate amount of time between sharpening unless they have a service. Knife sharpening services want paid before they leave and most restaurants are not the cash cows they seem to be. One of the banes to knife practice in commercial kitchens is the "abrasive steel". These little beauties are made of, or coated with, ceramic, or ghod forbid, diamond. There seems to be no way to keep these things out of the kitchen, either home or commercial, and the result by the time the sharpening service gets there is a kitchen full of, for lack a better word, butter knives.

Processing plants are a lot better. They usually run on two shifts, with a cleanup shift as the third shift. This is when the sharpening gets done by someone who knows what they are doing. These knives are in contact with bone and chainmail for two shifts and often carry a 40° included angle, some go with 35°, and will go smaller only if a knife will last through two shifts, some applications yes, some no way. The 40° angle is durable and stands up to steeling well, and steeling is an effective and common practice.

Butcher shops are semi-processing plants with butchers who maintain their own knives. Food store meat departments have some of the sharpest and dullest knives I have ever seen.

Commercial knives are the best for the home kitchen to the processing plant. They are well made. Forschner and Mundial are good brands, with Forschner superior. There is no steel like a Dexter, they don't have to sell to the home market, they do just fine in the commercial marketplace.

I could rail you with stories of the kitchen sharpening days, but it might be easier to ask questions and get some dialog going.

Art

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

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Posted

I appreciate the response. Like you, I am a sharpening fanatic. I don't do commercial sharpening, but rather sharpening for 6 households. From lawnmower blades to pocket knives I sharpen it all and during hunting season run my own private butcher shop making everything from aged beef to deer sausage. Thusly, my knives are important tools to me and I love each and every one. Even the cheapest knives have a place in my life cutting hay string or as "loaners".

My absolute passion is my processing knives and kitchen knives. And I am always looking to pick up a new trick or skill to make them sharper and work better.

  • Moderator
Posted

I just looked at your profile, and if you are a knapper, you already know that knapped obsidian is about the sharpest edge you can get, but again, they don't last long, but are easy to maintain.

It takes about five years of experience to learn the sharpening business. It is fairly simple to sharpen something, depending on what you call sharp. It is something quite different to learn to sharpen something well and do it quickly. If you want to make money at it, that is a whole different can of worms. The business can be quite expensive as tool costs are high and experimentation can balloon tool costs to pretty astronomical levels. Growth costs are even more intimidating, and just wait till you hire your first employee. Been there, done that, ain't doing it anymore. I am retired, and still make the occasional knife for friends kids going into the service, and sharpen anything that makes it to my door. I still have all the gear, so why not use it.

But you don't really need all the equipment and product to sharpen something. Professionally, doing a job and making a living at it requires all that; but just sharpening merely requires a knife to sharpen and an available rock.

If someone can learn something from me, that is cool. If I can learn something, more the better.

Art

P.S. To all using this forum. A first name is helpful, or a nickname, or a last name, or even an alias, as we can answer each other or specifically direct something at each other. Just a thought.

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

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Posted (edited)

Art,

I hope this takes off I'd like to learn more. I sharpen a lot of stuff and scissors kicked my butt. Then one day at an auction I bought a wolf twice as sharp. I'm from farming country and little itty bitty tools like that don't sell well here. They just saw it as a little underpowered grinder. That's been a learning experience in angles and edge relationship. There are way more dull scissors in use than sharp ones.

Edited by Oldtoolsniper
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Posted

Since we're talking about knives, I just wanted to take a second to show off my japanese damascus steel knives I picked up last month. 15 degree bevel on a 50/50 taper. Even when I hone these I start to cringe that I dont mess up the patterning. A gyuto, petty knife, and bread knife.

12241327_10207105440426330_6431451320277

CbYA4hu.jpg

 

Rob

www.ridgewayleatherworks.com 

IG: @Ridgewayleatherworks

FB: RidgewayLeatherworks

  • Moderator
Posted

Sniper,

How about a name to go with "Beaver from Iowa" Avatar.

I know a few guys who do scissors. They go from shop to shop with a Wolf or even just a grinder with some aftermarket jig and that's all they do, run out of the back of a van usually. The Wolf works fine for most scissors, but then you get the occasional hairdresser oops, stylist from Rodeo Drive who just has to use $1000 scissors where $150 would do. The Wolf will not do these well, I have seen the results, or maybe it was the guy running it. I have found the Edge-Pro to do a good job on any of these things, even the uber expensive ones. I got my Edge-Pro back when he first marketed it and it has worked from kitchen to salon. It now stays setup for scissors. Till you get used to the way to do scissors, you will bleed over everything, those thin little cuts hurt after a while. On the really good scissors (the $100-$200 kind not the $1000, as that's just too much for anybody to pay for scissors) you can get an 80° or 90° edge sharp enough to cut skin on touch. I really didn't believe that till I did it, and I bled. I have a roll of alligator skin tape that IF I remember to put it on, helps to keep me from getting cut-up.

Art

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

  • Moderator
Posted
  On 1/31/2016 at 6:17 PM, JerseyFirefighter said:

Since we're talking about knives, I just wanted to take a second to show off my japanese damascus steel knives I picked up last month. 15 degree bevel on a 50/50 taper. Even when I hone these I start to cringe that I dont mess up the patterning. A gyuto, petty knife, and bread knife.

12241327_10207105440426330_6431451320277

CbYA4hu.jpg

Beautiful work. The question is, collect them or use them. I just love Top Chef and all the others where the "Chefs" bring in their knife rolls with about 10 knives in them. I have only seen that once in a commercial kitchen, and those knives went home that night, never to return. I have never seen a cook or chef treat a knife well enough to have that kind of fit and finish. The dishwasher, throws them in a tray and runs them through the machine. I couldn't bring something as pretty as that to work.

Art

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

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Posted
  On 1/31/2016 at 6:45 PM, Art said:

Beautiful work. The question is, collect them or use them. I just love Top Chef and all the others where the "Chefs" bring in their knife rolls with about 10 knives in them. I have only seen that once in a commercial kitchen, and those knives went home that night, never to return. I have never seen a cook or chef treat a knife well enough to have that kind of fit and finish. The dishwasher, throws them in a tray and runs them through the machine. I couldn't bring something as pretty as that to work.

Art

They see moderate use. I cook at home and take them occasionally to the firehouse as im the chef on the shift. Since im not using them 8-12 hours I can take the time to care for them properly. After all the prep work is done the first thing I do is wash/dry them and put them back in their place. After years of having dull cheap knives I will never go back after getting edges like these.

 

Rob

www.ridgewayleatherworks.com 

IG: @Ridgewayleatherworks

FB: RidgewayLeatherworks

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