The BIGGEST LIE in the knife industry- Good Heat Treatment vs BAD Heat Treatment

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OUTDOORS55

OUTDOORS55

Күн бұрын

Does heat treatment matter more than knife hardness? Can you have a bad heat treatment with good hardness? Where is the performance difference? Does edge retention suffer from a high hardness but a bad heat treatment? These are all questions I wanted answers to. So I made 3 knives one with a good heat treatment and 2 with progressively bad heat treatments. All three had the same rockwell hardness (60.5-61hc). I was definitely surprised by my findings.
Chapters
00:00 Does heat treatment or Hardness matter if equal hardness?
00:48 How I made 3 test blades with good and bad heat treatments at the same hardness.
03:33 Tip strength test
05:38 Brass rod impact test
06:42 Apex stability testing
08:15 Beginning of the edge retention testing THINGS GET INTERESTING..
12:14 What are the take aways from this testing
14:16 Before you say I screwed up…
About⬇️
Hi, Im Alex, im a knife maker and KZbinr, based out of southern Pennsylvania and my youtube channel is Outdoors55. This channel started as an outdoor backpacking channel, but quickly grew into a knife/ knife making channel. Everything I do on my channel is family friendly. I primarily focus on knife / knife making videos but occasionally throw in something different. Thank you for watching!😀
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Пікірлер: 657
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
Sorry one detail I forgot to mention was the steel is 1084. I knew I was forgetting something 😂
@Butthead98
@Butthead98 Жыл бұрын
you didnt, you actually mentioned it around 14:52, great vid tho!
@PetesGuide
@PetesGuide Жыл бұрын
Actually you did at exactly 14:00 and 14:55 even though you didn’t explicitly say earlier that’s what these knives were made from.
@tacticalcenter8658
@tacticalcenter8658 Жыл бұрын
1084(AISI) - Simple carbon steel, low wear resistance, decent shock resistance. Manufacturing Technology - Ingot Country - United States USA
@brianlawson3757
@brianlawson3757 Жыл бұрын
No, you mentioned it at the very end and my ears picked up on it. You just didn't have it on your comparison layout paper. It's the same steel I'm working in right now while I can get it. The 1080 series seems to be one of those blends that is only around here and there like D2, W1, and W2 were when I first started forging blades.
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
Ha! I meant to mention at the beginning..oh well glad its in there somewhere though 👍
@cypher6083
@cypher6083 Жыл бұрын
What I learned from this experiment is that even if you are a professional knife maker who does a month long experiment there will always be a 16 year old Redditor in the comments claiming to have a more informed opinion.
@charlesjonestherednecknerd
@charlesjonestherednecknerd Жыл бұрын
Basically, this is what I have always heard. HRC goes to edge retention. Proper heat treatment (temperature and tempering) goes to the toughness of the blade and how well it can take impacts and lessens the chance of breaking or failing during usage. To me heat treatment is all important. So a 57 HRC might be my choice over a 62 HRC I can sharpen a knife with a pocket diamond stone or ceramic rod even in the field. What I can't do is replace one in the field that breaks.
@christopherrowley7506
@christopherrowley7506 Жыл бұрын
Exactly! His statement: "When people talk about performance they are talking about edge retention" really frustrates me because it's too true, when it shouldn't be. People these days obsess over edge retention and they get overly brittle and impossible to sharpen knives.
@baadtaste1337
@baadtaste1337 Жыл бұрын
@@christopherrowley7506 Bought a chefs knife once that was so hard i could not sharpen it in a normal way. It ended up being used in the garden :D
@mikeries8549
@mikeries8549 Жыл бұрын
​@@baadtaste1337 surgical steel
@jic1
@jic1 Жыл бұрын
@@mikeries8549 When a knife is sold as being made with 'surgical steel' without being any more specific, that almost invariably means that it's made of 420J2 stainless (or nearest Chinese or Japanese equivalent). 420J2 is about as soft as a steel can be and still make a useful knife. It's sold as 'surgical' because it's extremely corrosion resistant, and therefore ideal for surgical instruments. it's more likely that this 'unsharpenable' knife is made of what would be considered a 'tool steel'.
@RelativelyBest
@RelativelyBest Жыл бұрын
Yeah, this has always been my understanding, since my interests lie more towards swords and other weapons as opposed to knives meant as tools. For a weapon, you'll often even prioritize durability over sharpness - a slightly dull sword is better than a broken one - so proper heat treatment is very important. It never occurred to me that for tool knives the priority might be reversed, but I guess that makes sense.
@kelvinsullivan6299
@kelvinsullivan6299 Жыл бұрын
The answer to the quandary is obvious. The badly treated knives lacked handles and were therefore cold. Which meant they were shivering at the same frequency as an oscillating tool which caused them to appear artificially sharp
@rrcaniglia
@rrcaniglia Жыл бұрын
Clever! Love it.
@joshalmighty1901
@joshalmighty1901 Жыл бұрын
Uma...
@BobJones-bh9qz
@BobJones-bh9qz Жыл бұрын
The poor knives exposed out in the cold 😔
@e.t.preppin7084
@e.t.preppin7084 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant deduction, is your real name Watson by any chance 😂
@uncletiggermclaren7592
@uncletiggermclaren7592 Жыл бұрын
Poor-mans' vibro-dag.
@joshingle8532
@joshingle8532 Жыл бұрын
This was extremely well done. Interesting to say the least. I’d love to see more vids like this bud
@Enes-wj5xq
@Enes-wj5xq Жыл бұрын
Can you harden a knife by magnetizing it for along period of time ?
@mountainholler290
@mountainholler290 Жыл бұрын
​@@Enes-wj5xq no .
@norbertnagy5514
@norbertnagy5514 6 ай бұрын
​@@Enes-wj5xqi dont think so, but it probably becames magnetized itself.
@andrewayers1141
@andrewayers1141 Жыл бұрын
This is just based on my experience and own personal research but likely the reason why all three of the knives had similar edge retention is because in reality what you're testing is abrasion resistance which with a more basic carbon steel like the 1084 that you were testing with, it pretty much just comes down to the hardness (and edge geometry, which was identical) of it which all of them were nearly identical. Toughness, strength, and apex/edge stability are much more open to variation depending on the other specifics that come along with heat treatment, which is exactly what your testing showed. Honestly, these results didn't surprise me at all, the results reconfirmed prior conclusions I've made. That's why HRC is just one indicator for a good heat treatment and isn't the only way that a person should be evaluating purchasing a knife. Videos of real world testing actually demonstrating the edge retention, toughness, strength, and edge stability are the best resource.
@MrSunrise-
@MrSunrise- Жыл бұрын
Yeppers. 1084 is a pretty simple steel. Going to A2 yields much greater abrasion resistance (edge holding) because of the wear-resistant complex carbides formed, but heat treating is a little trickier - you need to watch your austintizing temperature and temper to Rc58 to get a maximally tough blade. If you're going to put all of that work into a blade, use a good steel and have it properly heat treated.
@jaysonfraser5268
@jaysonfraser5268 Жыл бұрын
The trouble with heat treatment from a consumer perspective is that it’s hard to quantify. Someone can tell me that Spyderco (for example) does an excellent job with heat treatment, but someone like me doesn’t really know what that means. Hardness, on the other hand, can be tested with a fancy machine like yours and listed in the specs. I’m no metallurgist, but if I’m choosing between two knives I’m at least smart enough to know that 61 is higher than 58. Most people wouldn’t put the effort into understanding the intricacies of heat treatment even if companies presented it as plainly as possible. In other words, while heat treatment is likely just as important, hardness numbers still make more sense for layman knife shoppers.
@OllieVK
@OllieVK Жыл бұрын
Bzzzt. White iron can be 65 Rockwell, but would be a rubbish blade. Relying on hardness alone is misguided. It's like only relying on the miles per gallon when buying a vehicle.
@AlexanderMason1
@AlexanderMason1 Жыл бұрын
@@OllieVK exactly. Some steel at 58 HRC will be far superior to another steel at 63HRC for example. Also two steels with the same hardness will be entirely different in performance, toughness, edge retention etc. What matters is the specific steel being used as well as the heat treatment.
@geico1975
@geico1975 Жыл бұрын
Well, I've always heard one of the best in the industry is Buck, the whole Boss Heat Treat thing, but I sent a 110 in under warranty because the tip broke off on me. Of course, I'm hoping I had a lemon and I'll never worry about that again. A month later another Buck 722 Spitfire I had broke, the internal mechanism snapped or something sent it in, haven't gotten them back yet, but totally rethinking Buck.
@AlexanderMason1
@AlexanderMason1 Жыл бұрын
@@geico1975 probably something you did.
@MatrixCoreteam
@MatrixCoreteam Жыл бұрын
As a metallurgist, if someone tells me that one is 58 and the other is 61 I would assume both could have come off the same load. We don't heat treat to a single hardness. We heat treat to a range. Even a hardness test block has +/-.5 HRc uncertainty.
@KnifeSteelNerds
@KnifeSteelNerds Жыл бұрын
Very fun, practical testing to show the differences created from bad heat treating.
@KillaZamii
@KillaZamii Жыл бұрын
What’s poppin larrin
@dan_taninecz_geopol
@dan_taninecz_geopol Жыл бұрын
Bah gawd that's Larrin's music!
@donttreadonme1423
@donttreadonme1423 6 ай бұрын
Came looking for the Larrin stamp lol
@Incandescentiron
@Incandescentiron Жыл бұрын
Great experiment. So, Edge retention and toughness are somewhat independent of each other. That is very valuable information. Thank you for posting!
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
Yes exactly👍👍 two different things 🙂
@GreenBeetle
@GreenBeetle Жыл бұрын
Great video! It would be interesting to compare toughness of a well heat treated knife at 61 HRC with poorly heat treated knife at 58 HRC.
@rrcaniglia
@rrcaniglia Жыл бұрын
Or vice versa.
@me2bfc
@me2bfc Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the relationship between toughness and hardness is not linear and quite steel specific. The poorly treated knife at 58 could be notably less tough than one at 61 with a good treatment.
@oldeays5085
@oldeays5085 Жыл бұрын
58 HRC is not poorly heat treatment at all!! 😂
@me2bfc
@me2bfc Жыл бұрын
@@oldeays5085 depends on how it got there. Pull out of the fire/oven and quench and you can get to 58 without even tempering if you mismatch the steel and the quench.
@adawolf9483
@adawolf9483 Жыл бұрын
Toughness will always be worse in the poorly heat treated knife regardless of the HRC.
@ieatcaribou7852
@ieatcaribou7852 Жыл бұрын
So glad to see you back on KZbin. Thanks for doing all of this frustrating work for all of us. You really do a great job of simplifying tests and explaining it to your audience.
@KnifeCrazzzzy
@KnifeCrazzzzy Жыл бұрын
This is extremely fascinating!!! Thank you for the time and effort that went into this! 🙌🏻🤙🏻
@DanieHattingh
@DanieHattingh Жыл бұрын
This was amazing. It confirmed a few suspicions I had too. Thank you so much for going through all this effort. It would've taken me years to get this amount of experience.
@NandoKleijn
@NandoKleijn Жыл бұрын
Man, you seriously know science, especially after including the exceptions and disclaimers. I love your approach on steels and their properties, and your channel of course.
@Muscovy7
@Muscovy7 Жыл бұрын
Interesting results, toughness definitely matters for chipping on the edge. I imagine the results for edge stability in super steels would be interesting.
@davidgrise5820
@davidgrise5820 Жыл бұрын
I'm just learning about all of this, your work and demonstration made it clear and easy to understand. Encouragement and props on what you did and shared. Outstanding job!!!
@houseblacksmithing9836
@houseblacksmithing9836 Жыл бұрын
You did a good job! Hardness determines edge retention and abrasion resistance. But grain size determines toughness, in choppers, axes, and swords heat treatment is key to the performance of the blade. I have had poorly heat treated blades snap, much sooner than a properly heat treated blade.
@thorwaldjohanson2526
@thorwaldjohanson2526 4 ай бұрын
Another point is that you can get a thinner edge (more acute angle) with a tougher steel, without getting chipping. A thinner edge INCREASES edge retention. So the truly telling test would be to grind the 3 knives to an angle where they don't chip or roll on normal cutting tasks. Then see how the edge retention compares. (follow up video? *wink wink *)
@vontinkles
@vontinkles Жыл бұрын
Most of this was above my head, but still enjoyed watching and learning 🙂 Kudos for all the work you put into this. Thanks for sharing!
@joestahl5649
@joestahl5649 Жыл бұрын
Hey there, great video! I wanted to add a little thought to the discussion that you didnt mention in your video. I believe it is wrong to reduce the knives performance to edge retention of the blade where harder means better. By following through with that thought, the best knive would be a knive that has not been annealed at all. Your findings do prove that there is a difference in quality that is independent of the hardness value, after all nonne wants a kitchen knife to break upon cutting into a bone. Wich could happen with a knife that is equally bad as the third one. But on the other hand i do not believe that it is possible or sensible to try and find a metric to measure the quality of the heat treatment, since the manufacturers of quality knives have figuered it out anyways and the manufacturers of bad knives (i.e. the 26$ damacus knive you teste) lie about their products anyways. I believe the current system, where we get an information about the hardness and assume that it has been heat treated correctly, is flawed but there is no realistic benefit for the average consumer to change anything about it. Btw i love that you try to test things, that are currently measured by feelings and subjective means, in a way that is as scientific as humanly possible. Keep up the good work man!
@robertshell4176
@robertshell4176 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I think this kind of stuff is extremely interesting. Thanks for sharing, always looking forward to more of your content.
@2dthoughts
@2dthoughts Жыл бұрын
Glad to see you posting again Upset I wasn’t notified for 7 months, but glad I’ve got a bunch of stuff to watch now
@brianlawson3757
@brianlawson3757 Жыл бұрын
This was a great, down to the bones kind of video. I found it especially helpful since I'm currently using only 1084 and really trying to pin down how to get my best results with it. When I worked 1095 years ago out of an anthracite coal forge, all my blades failed because of grain growth. I just couldn't give it a steady soak without going too hot at some point and the grain looked like that moldable sand kids play with. Total disaster for me. I'm trying to focus now on maximizing durability. I'm getting ready to make a knife for my little nephew for when he goes out fishing or hunting with his dad, and if he's anything like I was as a boy, he'll need a blade that can hold up to um,...'rough' treatment 😉👍
@daw162
@daw162 Жыл бұрын
if you're heat treating in a forge, you'll need to heat the steel and not the forge. The advice to try to make a forge perform like a furnace is bad advice for simple stuff. If you can have a hot spot at your burner or burners and the ability to move the blade in and out of it, you'll get no grain growth with 1084 and 1095 if you do a low temperature pre-quench, then do thermal cycles - pull the blade out of the forge and let it cool to black each time and then heat only to nonmagnet plus a little bit of a temperature overshot as much as you can get one in literally 10 seconds and then quench. You should end up with finer grain than you'll see pictures of anywhere else and nothing unusual in the structure of the steel. if you use 1084 and overshoot temp once after the thermal cycles "just to be sure it's hot enough" for 15 seconds, the grain growth will double in size. 1095 is a little more forgiving, but it doesn't have any real margin to give in toughness. You can practice the thermal cycles by overshooting temperature on a sample for 15 seconds and examining it vs. something annealed once and quenched just after nonmagnetic. The latter will double in size grain wise. Take magnified pictures of the grain, then do thermal cycles with the large grain sample and bring it back to grain smaller than the part that you intentionally didn't overheat. That gives you a very good idea of what you're seeing in forge by looks and by time and how much it affects grain. You'll want to take an offcut and do this with everything you'd like to use. 80crV2, for example, suffers no visual change after a 15 second high temperature overshot. That doesn't mean the intentional overshot past just a little is a good idea, it just lets you know what you're dealing with.
@beetroot7486
@beetroot7486 Жыл бұрын
If you want even heat in a solid fuel forge, place a thick walled (thin walled works too) pipe in the coals and bring it to temperature, then place the blade inside and the radiant heat will heat it up very evenly.
@timcline2799
@timcline2799 Жыл бұрын
Very impressive. So thorough. Full comprehension of theory while taking practical to maximum. The edge retention testing done here is supreme.
@benwiley3962
@benwiley3962 Жыл бұрын
Another great test and video...appreciate all the work you put into these!
@LifeMyWay007
@LifeMyWay007 Жыл бұрын
I have Absolutely NO IDEA WHY, but You are one of my Most Favorite Channels!!! Keep up whatever Magic you do in your videos :)
@clivegower-collins9012
@clivegower-collins9012 Жыл бұрын
A thoughtful video with more evidence and detail than most. Keep feeding through useful stuff like this please. Appreciate your channel
@Skidgiz99
@Skidgiz99 Жыл бұрын
Super glad you did this video. A few of my first knives were quenched way too hot and I've been really trying to get my heat treatment sorted
@CagedSUPERMAN
@CagedSUPERMAN Жыл бұрын
Shit I’ve had a string of good ones and really shitty ones. I don’t know what’s going on
@dcsensui
@dcsensui Жыл бұрын
Very educational. Most folks would focus on the hardness and not consider toughness. For knives that are used in the great outdoors and need to be dependable, toughness matters. Thanks for taking all the time to do this, and for sacrificing your arm hairs in pursuit of knowledge.
@jn651
@jn651 Жыл бұрын
Dude you rock. So many people treat (no pun intended) this topic as yes/no when there are lots of maybes involved. To say nothing of whether the knives get used hard enough to discern a difference. Bravo
@CheeseFriesAndCoffee
@CheeseFriesAndCoffee 3 ай бұрын
You put so much work into these videos. Thank you for all the information!
@gunflint1776
@gunflint1776 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting results. Not entirely what I expected. Thanks for all that hard work! I'm sure it was a pain in the drain, but we're all more knowledgeable for it.
@watermain48
@watermain48 Жыл бұрын
I've been watching your channel since the start and just wanted to tell you how much better your knives have gotten with all the experience you've gained. Just wanted to pass that along. I really enjoy your videos, keep it up my young friend.
@philipgamboa6134
@philipgamboa6134 Жыл бұрын
Always great watching ur vids. learning something new that makes us wonder and wanna try during lazy winter day. God speed
@VTPSTTU
@VTPSTTU Жыл бұрын
Thanks for an excellent video. An interesting test would be to take the knife with the poor heat treatment and re-treat that knife with the good heat treatment to see what effect you would get. The long and hot initial treatment would cause grain growth, but the quench might set up the microstructure to have a better grain size on a second heat treatment. The other possibility is that the prior austenite grain boundaries are already established as large grains and that you wouldn't fully recover the grain structure. Getting the steel back to where it should be might require annealing, rolling, and heat treating from the beginning. All of my classes in this area were too long ago for me to remember what the answer is.
@DconBlueZ
@DconBlueZ Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, always enjoy watching!
@jerrythomas463
@jerrythomas463 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos. And I can coMpletely relate to the “running out of arm hair” issue.
@Fattrucker
@Fattrucker Жыл бұрын
You're killing it boi ! ! ! Absolutely fantastic content . The way you test stuff in a kinda scientific real world use way is great . I don't know how else you could test knives any better . Sure all super scientific in a lab etc . But who uses knives like that? Or totally real world with no empirical data gathered whatsoever . Just gut feelings and personal anecdotal impressions . Keep it up . Those close ups are stellar BTW ! P.S. How's the house renovations coming along ? Fattrucker
@cordobadebear
@cordobadebear Жыл бұрын
Great testing and discussion!! I fully agree, that’s why I don’t get excited about overly hard steels, unless they are also tough… pure edge retention only matters if you slice cardboard or rope all day in a controlled manner, but if you start using a knife in a realistic way, who needs a fragile blade that will be difficult to resharpen and strop? Favourite tool steels would be m4, k390, favourite stainless would be cpms30v… looking forward to trying out cruwear and magnacut, don’t care about 15v, s90v, m390 unless it’s heat treated to perfection, also don’t care about 110v or maxamet
@alvinharp3437
@alvinharp3437 Жыл бұрын
Interesting demonstration, definitely food for thought. A lot of trust goes into the purchase of a knife. I'm very careful with my good (expensive) knives because I don't want to mess up the finish, even knowing the knife is suppose to be very tough. How a knife cuts and how often it must be sharpen is about the only way a consumer can get a sense of whether the knife is satisfactory. I suppose if a knife manufacturer did a poor job with their heat treatments it would eventually get out thanks to social media. They have to do a good job to protect their reputation id they want to stay in business long term.
@jamesmiddleton6464
@jamesmiddleton6464 Жыл бұрын
Well done. I think what you are highlighting the difference between edge retention and toughness in a very understandable way. High performance is really a combination of both.
@hisnameisrentoo
@hisnameisrentoo Жыл бұрын
Wow. This is great stuff. Thanks for sharing your findings! The world needs more vids like this.
@thebutcher7919
@thebutcher7919 6 ай бұрын
Amazing and insightful work! thank you for the dedication and efforts.
@joetaylor486
@joetaylor486 Жыл бұрын
I am late to your channel and this video. I found this fascinating and it challenged several precepts I had about knife steel and functionality. Also I predicted the humungous grains on the badly treated knife, so a year of a metallurgy degree wasn't completely wasted 😊
@sayeretmatkaal
@sayeretmatkaal Жыл бұрын
Wow. What a fantastic experiment, video & channel ! MOST impressive ...and inspiring ! Kudos Sir !
@CristiNeagu
@CristiNeagu Жыл бұрын
5:57 Dude. I'm looking at those images and my mind is blown. Like, you can see the scratch marks from the grinding. But look in between the scratch marks, towards the edge. That is really smooth. Wow! For some reason I was expecting scratch marks all the way down. So unexpected.
@johnkennedyswenja
@johnkennedyswenja Жыл бұрын
I'm pondering about this video and I decided I really like it and appreciate the time you invested.
@71simonforrester
@71simonforrester Жыл бұрын
That was counterintuitive! Thanks for carrying out the experiment for us all.
@barkingspider2007
@barkingspider2007 Жыл бұрын
I tend to buy knives with higher claimed HRC. The chipping issue is something the OEM's tend to discount as ____________ steel is difficult to work with and prone to chipping. Maxamet knives are a good example. I purchased two identical knives, one chipped like mad, the other ZERO issues. I sent the chipping knife back to the OEM and was told the Rockwell was "within spec" good luck with the knife... The chipping issue eventually sharpened out. The knife still has damage where the chips were too deep to completely remove. (waste of knife steel, only cosmetic issue.) Thanks for the video, excellent work! : )
@scdub
@scdub Жыл бұрын
Interesting results - thanks for taking the time to film and share.
@lonelycactusproduction2976
@lonelycactusproduction2976 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video as always! I love these comparison style videos
@Enigma-Sapiens
@Enigma-Sapiens Жыл бұрын
Great video, testing, and commentary thank you!
@c62west
@c62west Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your work. The testing and analysis was enlightening.
@turing2376
@turing2376 Жыл бұрын
after being in the "discussion" in the other video and seeing all the work in this one I had to drop a comment for the algorithm at least. great content and video presentation as usual, top notch. was interesting to see real world example and comparison with very low carbide forming steel.
@gogart3
@gogart3 Жыл бұрын
Somewhat surprised how they all dulled at the same time regurdless of the heat treat. Excellent job on keeping all of the other factors so even for each knife as the tests progressed. Think I have a better understanding of some of the aspects of heat treat and how the edges react to those tests.
@hansdietrich1496
@hansdietrich1496 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for your thorough testing and not just making up wild statements out of thin air!
@thunderbunny4592
@thunderbunny4592 Жыл бұрын
Another amazing video. Thank you for the knowledge
@BladeLabMiami
@BladeLabMiami Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing all that hard work.
@lukearts2954
@lukearts2954 Жыл бұрын
Love your setup, _especially_ because you're doing "pro science in a garage"... The close-ups keep teaching us a bunch of interesting things. Given you were aiming for the same hrc and found the same "performance" on all 3, would you say the performance is most linked to the hrc, or to the steel type? (i.e. if it's the hrc, similar results from other steels at the exact same hrc would be expected; if it's the steel type, then similar results would appear at (slightly) different hrc in the same steel, and different results in different steel at the same hrc)
@Donorcyclist
@Donorcyclist Жыл бұрын
“Bro science”, not pro.
@ichich3276
@ichich3276 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video, very informative! Thank you!
@jasonnonanon7206
@jasonnonanon7206 Жыл бұрын
By far my favorite knife marker on youtube. Can't wait to get my workshop set up.
@Norman_Fleming
@Norman_Fleming Жыл бұрын
I am not into knives, per se, but I find your videos to be very informative and enjoyable. Nice mix of facts and reality.
@MrOldclunker
@MrOldclunker Жыл бұрын
Great tests! Thanks for providing the results in real world testing.
@somerandomchd2252
@somerandomchd2252 Жыл бұрын
glad to see you putting out content friend. whenever I see your videos I always click. keep doing your thing :)
@roy.h.barrett
@roy.h.barrett Жыл бұрын
This is good stuff man. Thanks for sticking with it for the duration of your test... im sure it was beyond monotonous at points.
@brosius85
@brosius85 Жыл бұрын
Awesome work mate thanks for sharing.
@MrSaltybloke
@MrSaltybloke Жыл бұрын
it would be interesting to see how the un-tempered knife at 65 hardness compared to the other three, in the same test categories. A fair assumption would be that edge retention was better than the others, due to the greater hardness, but toughness would be rubbish
@vladuletzu72
@vladuletzu72 Жыл бұрын
Un tempered blade will snap at once, is like a glass very hard but very weak on elasticity
@ThisNameWasTooLon
@ThisNameWasTooLon Жыл бұрын
it would break instantly.. possibly even from just setting it down too hard
@trubadyr99
@trubadyr99 Жыл бұрын
Love these types of videos! Thumbs up!
@janneruohomaki2211
@janneruohomaki2211 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful stuff. All this hardness/heat treatment stuff has been a bit murky to me. This was the very enlightening.
@eduardomagnafotografia5835
@eduardomagnafotografia5835 4 ай бұрын
Great video and great explanation. Thank you and congratulations. The main problem here is that, when you buy a knife, you will never know if the heat treatment was made well, good or bad... Only if you abuse your knife to the breaking point.
@matthewpeterson1318
@matthewpeterson1318 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see a video on different sharpening angles and the edge retention and edge toughness for the different angles!
@vladuletzu72
@vladuletzu72 Жыл бұрын
All depends of sharpening angle, if is more open it will last more, if is more close like, 10-15 degree, it will last shorter time
@clf235
@clf235 Жыл бұрын
It would be interesting to see how they perform in processing a deer. From skinning, to parting and even boning. At least that is how I judge my knives. Hold a reasonable edge and not break. Keep up the good work.
@ciscosugui8290
@ciscosugui8290 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for conducting this experiment. I just learned not to worry about the heat treatment of light duty knives.
@1d3d4f5s2d
@1d3d4f5s2d Жыл бұрын
Really well done video! It shouldn’t be much of a surprise that these all had the same edge retention. Regardless of crystal structure, HRC directly correlates to abrasion resistance, that’s effectively what it measures. Harder things will resist abrasion better than softer things. The grain size, which is the only variable here shouldn’t effect how the steel wears in a pure cutting application. Hacking through some boards would likely show more micro chipping and therefore faster wear on the poorly treated ones though.
@olafkliemt1145
@olafkliemt1145 Жыл бұрын
you put so much effort in your tests. thanks for that !
@joshuacruce8964
@joshuacruce8964 2 ай бұрын
These results make perfect sense. Wear resistants as far as I know is a quality of the steel, and the hardness. Toughness is greatly enhanced by reducing retained austentite and when a steel is soaked at a higher temp longer it can increase that pesky brittle stuff. At the same hardness and wear resistance the knives should all slice the same. If your chopping however I bet chips would show up fast in the poor heat treat. Also I bet the crappy heat treats lead to less ability to flex when in a bending test. Great job showing how toughness and edge retention are manipulatable factors and how we can improve our outcomes
@Thestargazer56
@Thestargazer56 Жыл бұрын
Very practical testing. Every time I watch your videos, I can't help but chuckle at your quote "...Is this even wood..." Thanks for helping me as I'm lying in my recliner at home after having "unexpected" open heart surgery. Maybe by the time things cool down here in NC, I can start swanging my hammer again.👍
@marrenmiller
@marrenmiller Жыл бұрын
Very interesting, thanks for all your hard work on this. I'd be particularly curious to see how this impacts higher alloy, higher carbide steels, and particularly stainless steels. I have a feeling that the carbide make-up and corrosion resistance might be more affected on those steels.
@kellymah1579
@kellymah1579 9 ай бұрын
2😅ÿÿĝ ft😊
@jefferys9593
@jefferys9593 Жыл бұрын
Very thorough thank you for your hard work to bring out this video.
@woodrick1
@woodrick1 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. Perfect camera work and a great radio voice.
@kevin3837
@kevin3837 Жыл бұрын
This was a fantastic video. At some point I would love to see you test tuff steels like 8670 at higher hardness compared to other higher edge retention steels at lower hardness where those lines intersect and see the edge retention.
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
I do have some s7 laying around as well as some cpm-m4. Although im not sure those two would be a good match up. I think it may be difficult to match the two in hardness to a point where you are not introducing other undesirable characteristics into the steel. Might be worth a try though🤷‍♂️
@kevin3837
@kevin3837 Жыл бұрын
@@OUTDOORS55 Perhaps an easy one could be like 8670 at like 63 or 62 compared to O1 at 59. I would guess even at those different hardness levels they are still close to the same toughness. Or AEBL at 63/62 compared to another stainless at 59 where the toughness line intersects. Hope that makes sense. I guess my general theory is that tougher steels are more versatile and could come close in edge retention at higher hardness to other steels or left tuff when needed.
@mountainwolf1
@mountainwolf1 Жыл бұрын
This was a very informative and interesting test thank you for all your hard work godbless and be safe.
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@sergep1298
@sergep1298 Жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation, very informative thanks very much
@nathanrollick1833
@nathanrollick1833 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see you making videos again.
@KF1
@KF1 Жыл бұрын
very interesting stuff. Thanks for the video
@olafschermann1592
@olafschermann1592 Жыл бұрын
Wow - a lot of work and very interesting results. Thank you
@Arthurian.
@Arthurian. Жыл бұрын
Your videos have become really good. You learn so much by actually doing the damn thing, so to speak. Love your videos
@ashleycartwright349
@ashleycartwright349 Жыл бұрын
I nearly didn’t watch that. Wow most interesting video I’ve watched for ages. Great channel 👍
@3DCGdesign
@3DCGdesign Жыл бұрын
Big respect for massive effort and sharing generously with us. Bro science is real science when you can find something different from your hypothesis and force yourself to admit that finding so honestly.
@chazy10
@chazy10 Жыл бұрын
This video is a piece of GOLD!
@Kinglobo
@Kinglobo Жыл бұрын
Very informative. Gives some idea to people why 2 knives from the same steel and similar HRC can perform totally different. I got 2 mora knives from the same steel and one of them performs bad...
@toddcarr.
@toddcarr. Жыл бұрын
Great vid really enjoying the content. I think HRC is a good indicator of what heat treaters are looking for when they know the process was done correctly. If your expecting say 61 HRC but you only get 55 you know something went wrong with the process or the problem could be the steel itself. For consumers when buying from a company they are hoping the HRC is a result from a good heat treat process as an indicator of steel performance during cutting. For the typical person who isn't into the depth of heat treat process it's another statistic that they can slap on a label and say "we did the steel correctly" and the consumer will go for it because a higher number is better right. Just my opinion though. Thanks for the great vid and keep making sharp things fun and enjoyable.
@CarnivoreRonin
@CarnivoreRonin Жыл бұрын
That blew my mind. I would never have predicted your results, thanks
@kevinsorensen367
@kevinsorensen367 Жыл бұрын
This gives me hope as a hobby knife maker just starting that my knives have a chance of being somewhat decent 😅
@e.t.preppin7084
@e.t.preppin7084 Жыл бұрын
I’ve always loved all of your videos. I’ve also been so inspired by how your brain works. I’ve made about 50 or more knives and all with 1084 and simply used a file to determine hardness. I’ve never done any testing for fear of breaking one of my knives. (Embarrassing I know) I also have bought thousands of dollars worth of custom and production knives for many reasons. When it comes down to my EDC it’s kind of a strange story. I most love my para 2 for comfort in hand and being very functional with most tasks. I have so many different steels in the same style knife and probably prefer the one with s35vn. I carried it for years. I also own a cold steel recon 1 which is also in s35vn ( spear point). I’ve always hated thinking about using it for EDC because it’s hard to open, has rough plastic scales and it’s from Cold Steel. Strangely it’s by far my favorite EDC now for the last year. I cut the spring down shorter so the knife opens with a gentle wrist motion. It locks up securely and the rough plastic scales haven’t eaten a hole in my pocket. It just freaking stays sharp 🤷🏼‍♂️. Same steel as the para 2 but completely different results. I guess I’ll never know why the Recon 1 outperformed the para2 but that’s all I carry now. Keep up the great work my friend. You might just be the one to solve life’s mysteries. ✌️
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
Thanks my friend ill try! I haven't done anything or even used s35vn but it's definitely on the list of steels to mess around with! Thank for the comment really appreciate it 👍
@joshb6993
@joshb6993 Жыл бұрын
Very educational and enjoyable video, thanks for your efforts
@martinhafner2201
@martinhafner2201 Жыл бұрын
Edge retention without much side load is really just testing the steel and its hardness - slowly wearing the edge down to dull-ish. There would be very little rolling or chipping unless the steel is extremely weak. So you are testing the hardness, especially when they are the same steel alloy. You got that steel to 60-61 HRC on each knife, so short of extremely weak steel (e.g. walmart knife) they should perform in slow wear mode just about the same.
@OUTDOORS55
@OUTDOORS55 Жыл бұрын
I did do side load testing. Its in the video
@jonenglish6617
@jonenglish6617 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Always nice to see actual science. With real testing.
@rickjochem133
@rickjochem133 Жыл бұрын
Great honest video. Thank you
@scottmichaud8591
@scottmichaud8591 4 ай бұрын
I love your videos. You're the person that taught me to sharpen knives.
@Ben-uf3dc
@Ben-uf3dc 7 күн бұрын
Awesome bro science experiment. Thank you for the work you put in!
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