rapidboy said:Don't tell anyone over at British Blades or they might excommunicate me for crimes against a blade ):
Never mind excommunicating, I'm going to make your browser display a hideous shade of pink the next time you're online there
rapidboy said:Don't tell anyone over at British Blades or they might excommunicate me for crimes against a blade ):
Martyn said:Isn't that the wrong way round? It would make the kitchen knife have broad, fat bevels like a woodlore.
Andy said:Nope it's right
profile B from your pic. Most kitchen knives are ground in the 40-50talto angle for the final edge
Andy said:I was talking about the mora which only has one bevel
I wonderd if we confused each other. I was talking in a purely food sense so the final edge of most kitchen knives and the bevel of a mora
I think the angle at the spine of a victorinox is about 6.5 degrees per side
Some Japaneese knives do have secondary bevels close to 12.5 per side. Tend to be thin knives that would almost be a full flat and the 25degree edge makes them a tiny bit stronger (a lot have a bevel on one side of about 15-18) Not many people buy the damacus kitchen knives at £230 for a set of three though (having said that they sold out)
does this make sense to people?
Pict said:The SWAK is as near to perfect for my purposes as I can ask from a nine-dollar knife. Mac
rapidboy said:They just end up with bits missing from them ,bent blades or sharpened to the point that they are unusable.
They are cheap and save my good knives from rough treatment.
I was doing a bit of DIY at home today laying a foundation for a new garden path and i was using it to cut open bags of stones ,sand and cement and i wouldn't like to use anything more expensive.
I was using it as a chisel yesterday and it got hammered through a stud wall !
Don't tell anyone over at British Blades or they might excommunicate me for crimes against a blade ):