
Originally Posted by
Cliff Stamp
I am not exactly sure how much detail you want, on a fundamental level it is about fracture mechanics and how cutting happens when the surface of a material has the rupture pressure exceeded and how a cut continues by the same process and usually is also influenced by gross fracture of the material (i.e. splitting).
To start, the simplest cut is a straight push, the edge comes in contact with a material, there is a pressure when the surface of the edge hits the surface of the material. As you keep pressing this pressure increases and is on both on the material and on the edge. At some point this pressure will be so high the material being cut will break apart like a balloon popping just on a very small scale.
(or the edge will if you try to cut something that has a high rupture pressure than the edge, i.e., try to cut a ceramic plate with the edge of a knife)
If you leave the edge with a very coarse finish, it initially sinks in very quickly as the tips of the teeth generate very high pressures, however on most materials the area of the teeth (all the ups/downs) smear out the force and generate a much lower pressure for a given force so you have to press harder.
The simplest way to see this on a macroscopic scale is to press a serrated Spyderco into a turnip and do it with a plain edge. The teeth of the serrated edge initially go in much easier but as they sink in it start to become difficult as there is much more length in all the curves and a straight edge of similar angle/thickness thus push cuts much easier as it generates a higher pressure at a given force (it also causes crack propagation easier as all the force is in the same line where as serrated blades jiggers the force all over the place due to the curvature of the serrations).
However, when you do a draw cut something very different happens. It starts the same as the points of the teeth sink in very rapidly as again the points make a very high pressure, but then because you draw it (slice) the material is broken inbetween the teeth and the teeth now sink again very easily into the material as the points again are the high pressure points, and again as you draw the blade you clear the material and stop the "smearing" effect.
If you make a very long draw you can make the cut happen almost at the point just requiring the tooth penetration alone which is very little. For example, and to be very specific, if you take a blade which can push cut 3/8" hemp with a high polish at say 10 lbs then if you leave it with a coarse edge you can make a draw with just 1-2 lbs as again all you are really pushing into the material on a slice is just the depth of the teeth.