Here's a thought:
For years, my old Victorinox SAK has had it's place in my pocket. I remember at a young age (7 or 8) my Grandfather was driving through a parking lot to go to the grocery store. He stopped the car suddenly, walked out, and picked up the SAK that I still have to this day. I've had new cellidor handles added to it, but everytime I use it the memory of him is with me.
Anyway, enough of the sob story! For a while I couldn't quite figure out why my SAK would dull so quickly. The steel's actually not so bad, at 56hrc, it's easy to sharpen, and while it isn't incredibly hard, there are much softer steels out there, as I'm sure most of you would agree.
I ended up checking out the "Secret Order of Swiss Army Knives" and read the page about convex grinds. For years I used to sharpen my SAK on an arkansas stone set, strop it to a razor, and have it dull within a day. After reading the convex page, I setup an old mousepad, some wet/dry paper, and followed the directions.
The point is, after slightly convex-ing the bevel on the knife, it's edge retention has gone WAY up, and I haven't sharpened it in weeks.
So, is the grind of the steel the most important aspect? Or is hardness? Or blade shape? Or a combination of everything? I know that there is no perfect steel, but in what order would you put steel's aspects?
A.
For years, my old Victorinox SAK has had it's place in my pocket. I remember at a young age (7 or 8) my Grandfather was driving through a parking lot to go to the grocery store. He stopped the car suddenly, walked out, and picked up the SAK that I still have to this day. I've had new cellidor handles added to it, but everytime I use it the memory of him is with me.
Anyway, enough of the sob story! For a while I couldn't quite figure out why my SAK would dull so quickly. The steel's actually not so bad, at 56hrc, it's easy to sharpen, and while it isn't incredibly hard, there are much softer steels out there, as I'm sure most of you would agree.
I ended up checking out the "Secret Order of Swiss Army Knives" and read the page about convex grinds. For years I used to sharpen my SAK on an arkansas stone set, strop it to a razor, and have it dull within a day. After reading the convex page, I setup an old mousepad, some wet/dry paper, and followed the directions.
The point is, after slightly convex-ing the bevel on the knife, it's edge retention has gone WAY up, and I haven't sharpened it in weeks.
So, is the grind of the steel the most important aspect? Or is hardness? Or blade shape? Or a combination of everything? I know that there is no perfect steel, but in what order would you put steel's aspects?
A.