For those who want the real facts , seek to enhance their knowledge of one of mans oldest tools and its use in the field . What factors to consider in use and selection of materials to give great " property balance" , its a risky thread for a maker to post tbf but reading through an existing one I though that an actual professional knife maker and long time stalkers take on things might be of use to those of the forum membership who seek the facts that should be foremost in a stalkers mind.
There is no perfect material as regards knife steels , what we have is a selection of different steels both High carbon and stainless steel . Be aware that both of these come in a massive range of enhanced features (Properties) and also to achieve high performance in one thing other things will need to reduce. Think this like a high performance super car , its fast, looks cool but also drinks petrol like there is a hole in the tank and is difficult to park and climb in and out of . No room to stuff a hind in either !
The main three properties of a knife steel are 1. Toughness . 2. Edge retention 3. Corrosion Resistance 4. Hardness
The variables in different steels play off these four factors and the reason i do not have sharpness in the above is the fact that its largely geometry
Personally speaking and this might change as new products are developed
It might be worth pointing out that there is a book written specifically on Knife steels the heat treating of them and their geometry. Knife Engineering by DR. Larrin Thomas a son of a knifemaker who has done much work in development of processes and steels and has actually compiled a table of knife steel ratings covering 1,2,3 above including and a max working hardness .
To compare two steels and explain selection of properties i will take three steels and explain why i personally choose which
AEB-L ( interchangeable with SF100 ) Stainless
Toughness rating 9.5
edge retention 3
corrosion resistance 7
Max 63-64
440 A
toughness rating 3.5
edge retention 3.5
corrosion resistance 8.5
max 60-61 Rc
Elmax
toughness rating 4
edge retention 5.5
corrosion resistace 8
63-64 Rc
now for something different
Rex 121
toughness 1
edge retention 10
corrosion resistance 3.5
70-71 Rc
The last just to show the price paid for enhancing one thing and remember very high edge retention makes the sharpening job a harder , no free rides !
In practice during tests AEB-L / SF100 in the hands of a truly competent user will last 100 large species deer without begging for the stone, toughness means no missing tips so removing heads or dropping your knife onto a hard surface is a lot safer and i have yet to mistreat and neglect cleaning my knife and i do not use my knives in saltwater spearfishing so i am all good .
There is no perfect material as regards knife steels , what we have is a selection of different steels both High carbon and stainless steel . Be aware that both of these come in a massive range of enhanced features (Properties) and also to achieve high performance in one thing other things will need to reduce. Think this like a high performance super car , its fast, looks cool but also drinks petrol like there is a hole in the tank and is difficult to park and climb in and out of . No room to stuff a hind in either !
The main three properties of a knife steel are 1. Toughness . 2. Edge retention 3. Corrosion Resistance 4. Hardness
The variables in different steels play off these four factors and the reason i do not have sharpness in the above is the fact that its largely geometry
Personally speaking and this might change as new products are developed
It might be worth pointing out that there is a book written specifically on Knife steels the heat treating of them and their geometry. Knife Engineering by DR. Larrin Thomas a son of a knifemaker who has done much work in development of processes and steels and has actually compiled a table of knife steel ratings covering 1,2,3 above including and a max working hardness .
To compare two steels and explain selection of properties i will take three steels and explain why i personally choose which
AEB-L ( interchangeable with SF100 ) Stainless
Toughness rating 9.5
edge retention 3
corrosion resistance 7
Max 63-64
440 A
toughness rating 3.5
edge retention 3.5
corrosion resistance 8.5
max 60-61 Rc
Elmax
toughness rating 4
edge retention 5.5
corrosion resistace 8
63-64 Rc
now for something different
Rex 121
toughness 1
edge retention 10
corrosion resistance 3.5
70-71 Rc
The last just to show the price paid for enhancing one thing and remember very high edge retention makes the sharpening job a harder , no free rides !
In practice during tests AEB-L / SF100 in the hands of a truly competent user will last 100 large species deer without begging for the stone, toughness means no missing tips so removing heads or dropping your knife onto a hard surface is a lot safer and i have yet to mistreat and neglect cleaning my knife and i do not use my knives in saltwater spearfishing so i am all good .
cheers bs.



