What is your ultimate test for a sharp Knife

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BILLy

Full Member
Apr 16, 2005
734
0
57
NORTH WALES
Hi All,
Apologies if this has been asked before,
If not here goes.

What is your ultimate test for a sharp Knife?

I know the one about cutting a piece of A4 paper or any size come to that,
I use mine on my arm to see if it will shave the hairs of it.

thanks for your kind replies
 

Tadpole

Full Member
Nov 12, 2005
2,842
21
60
Bristol
Hi All,
Apologies if this has been asked before,
If not here goes.

What is your ultimate test for a sharp Knife?

I know the one about cutting a piece of A4 paper or any size come to that,
I use mine on my arm to see if it will shave the hairs of it.

thanks for your kind replies
Does it cut what I want it to cut? will it carve what I want it to carve? if it does, then it's sharp enough. My knife is as likly to be use to chop wood, as it is to be use for chopping up a side of beef/pork. Both types of jobs have their needs, and a knife that is sharp enough to do both is all that I want from a knife.
Saying that my clipper is sharper than the butchers knife in use at my local Morrisons :lmao: ( I know as I've seen them hacking for ages at a rack of belly pork)
 

SMARTY

Nomad
May 4, 2005
382
3
60
UAE
www.survivalwisdom.com
Fully agree with Tadpole on this one. Dont worry about sharpness "party tricks" on bits of paper or shaving the hairs from your body. Get it sharp enough to do the required task. If you want to know if the edge is sharp enough to carve wood test it by carving wood. Also test the whole edge. A little often is better than a sharpening blitz is what i have found in the past.

Smarty
 

John Fenna

Lifetime Member & Maker
Oct 7, 2006
23,137
2,876
66
Pembrokeshire
Sharp enough for the job in hand is a good measure in realworld terms - I tend to test mine after a stropping by slicing free hanging newspaper - if it will cleanly slice this along the length of the blade (the fibrous nature of the paper realy shows up any dead spots) then it is sharp.
This does away with the tedious necessity of taking wood or meat into my sharpening area (OK the spare bedroom/workroom) when getting things ready for a trip away.
If the blade dulls during a task then I will sharpen in situ, but normally I just strop (or work out any nicks and dull spots working from coarse to find diamond then strop) back at my work table - where a paper test is prefered to carving or meat prep by my other half:)
 

VirusKiller

Nomad
Jul 16, 2007
392
0
Hogsty End
I test my blade (carefully!) with my fingers. I feel along the whole blade to confirm it has a razor's edge and no burrs, though the latter can also be checked by looking along the edge of the blade for specks of reflected light.
 

Hoodoo

Full Member
Nov 17, 2003
5,302
13
Michigan, USA
My favorite test is to cut a very thin slice across the end grain of a stick of basswood. A sharp knife will make a clean, shiny cut, with no scratches. This is a pretty standard way to test woodcarving knives but also a great way to test the edge of bushcraft and hunting knive.
 

spamel

Banned
Feb 15, 2005
6,833
21
48
Silkstone, Blighty!
I go by feel too, also I am no longer going for the completely zero ground bevel often referred to as a scandi grind, but am now putting on a micro secondary bevel with a small jasper stone. It can hardly be seen but the edge remains sharp longer and is more robust. If you look at all the traditional Scandinavian blades you will notice that micro bevel. Robin Wood did a thread a while back about it and he is absolutely right, the fine edge left by putting it over the stones leaves an incredibly sharp edge, but it is so fine that it can be damaged easily.
 

BILLy

Full Member
Apr 16, 2005
734
0
57
NORTH WALES
[QUOTE ( I know as I've seen them hacking for ages at a rack of belly pork)[/QUOTE]

Maybe they did not do a test first to see if it was sharp enough for the said job.
 

Siberianfury

Native
Jan 1, 1970
1,534
6
mendip hills, somerset
my test only works with really sharp knives, i take a long hair and hold it loosley, then i swing my knife at the hair, if it cuts the loose hair its bloody sharp, the only knives ive been able to do this with are my opinel and puukko. if u try this dont get your fingers caught because its very easy to do so.
 

Chinkapin

Settler
Jan 5, 2009
746
1
83
Kansas USA
I grasp mine with the thumb and first two fingers, with the sharpened side of the blade upright. The blade is held more or less level with the floor. I then lean my head over to where it is about 15 cm. from the blade. At this point I give a short sharp blast of air directly at the blade.

If I can hear the screams of the tiny microbes as they are cut in two, I know it is sharp enough for my needs.

Of course it is axiomatic that this is nowhere near sharp enough to cut the very fabric of space/time.
 

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