No, not that much, 40 pounds difference in hardened billet, plus a bit more time for a blade finish.yeah I should imagine magnacut would be more expensive but not too much more. I had a k390 which was awsome. Took a while to notice a difference when sharpening mind
I agree with your observations, blade geometry is a key factor, of course, depending on the knife purpose.Tougher or more abrasion resistant steels also burn up more belts, take longer to grind and are harder to polish.... all adding to the cost.
They are harder for the client to sharpen too.
The reality of knives is that the grind and bevel angles are more important to usability and edge longevity than the steel in 99% of cases. In my opinion, of course.
Of course you are if you comparing Elmax to Aebl.I have been amazed by the edge retention on my Elmax steel blade from Peter Eaton. Truly impressive
Different knife steels have different ups and downs . We don't ( or should not) get drawn into " bang this is wonder do it all steel " . There is no best steel choice its a case of what you specifically need it to do . Then we have availability of sizes of stock .I have noticed some what of a trend going on with Aeb-l steel being used for hunting knives. I can’t help but think magnacut would be superior in comparison. However I don’t see anyone using this steel?
Yes I understand that there’s a reason why there’s so many different types- for different tasks. I was just meaning for example a 4” blade used for skinning, not cutting through bone, just to process a deer in the fieldDifferent knife steels have different ups and downs . We don't ( or should not) get drawn into " bang this is wonder do it all steel " . There is no best steel choice its a case of what you specifically need it to do . Then we have availability of sizes of stock .
We need how the tool is to be used to decide the best steel for the job at hand and we should balance that further with the Heat treat NOT JUST , THIS IS THE BEST without the specifics of many things like getting the best for purpose heat treat within the intended purpose .
Now to the multi metal mix in a modern Damascus ? it wont ever be even indeed there is a claim to the Damascus cutting effect .kind of hard to prove if its worse or better at anything on that one .
Let me explain for pure example how a cheap 1095 hc can beat all previous steels in the above , this steel by the way was actually first made to be the best clock spring way beck when Big Ben was being built. As its been moonlighting on the side a very long time since then though ! Take a machete ! It needs in no real order of imporance 1. to take an edge that is sharp as it is used to hack trough a jungle , it needs to be easy to re sharpen fast and well with a simple flat stone or similar . No fancy knife grinders in a jungle and you don't want to brake your blade into two parts through so we build in flexibility - just the job for a spring steel ! Now the downside , it isnt full of hard carbides so you will be sharpening more frequently , it corrodes pretty fast , so it needs more frequent attention .
Now the swing to The SF100/Aebl above as i type this both are pretty much getting onto twins . Its the very last jungle machete you would want frankly . Harder to sharpen without good skills and a decent set of stones and good light .
Do either reach a better sharpening state ? No! not really but they will hold a good edge longer but i serious chiping will be the first problem and the less fexible high carbides would end with a snapped blade
Back in the real word again The 1095 hc with a hotter / faster quench normally water over oils
Back to stalking knives now , tell your knifemaker what you want to achieve with the knife , rather than chase numbers and brands .
Very interesting enjoyed itWhen you get 5 minutes @Sniper308, maybe follow the link below and have a read, towards the end is my own opinion on the subject.
STEEL — Custom Knives - Stuart Mitchell Knives
www.stuartmitchellknives.com

I’m comparing to super gold powder steel laminate from Fallkniven, D2 tool steel and others I can’t recall. Elmax has impressed me greatly.Of course you are if you comparing Elmax to Aebl.
@Peter Eaton knives are nicely made and from what I've seen, they have good blade geometry, so I no wonder you're so impressed. It's good thing that some users want to test steels other than the popular ones, to have own opinions.I’m comparing to super gold powder steel laminate from Fallkniven, D2 tool steel and others I can’t recall. Elmax has impressed me greatly.
View attachment 470527
This is the direct comparison between AEB-L and Magnacut.
Magnacut edge retention is better, but toughness (resistance to chipping) is improved with AEB-L. For pure meat cutting edge retention is more important as it means longer between sharpening, but for a knife that could be hitting bone - especially at an angle, toughness is the quality to look for.