“Best” steels video with Larrin
“Best” steels video with Larrin
As requested by Sharp Guy in another thread, I thought this was interesting. Keep your eyes open for a Spyderco cameo.
-
- Member
- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2022 12:49 pm
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Watching Dr. Larrin Thomas talk about knife steel is always a incredible. The wealth of knowledge he has and shares challenges me to research and study the periodic table of elements in steel more!
-
- Member
- Posts: 91
- Joined: Sat May 06, 2023 9:07 pm
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Great video. I never saw Larrin before but he's exactly my kind of expert. Nerdy, full of caveats, straightforward - after seeing this video I like him even more.
The standout statement of the video - "Edge geometry is more important than steel or heat treatment in edge performance"
The standout statement of the video - "Edge geometry is more important than steel or heat treatment in edge performance"
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I also noticed that bit about edge geometry. I think that’s fairly well known by anyone familiar with making/sharpening knives.
What really made me smile was him saying how similar a lot of steels are in performance.
What really made me smile was him saying how similar a lot of steels are in performance.
-
- Member
- Posts: 342
- Joined: Mon Sep 24, 2018 8:13 am
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Cool video. S110V fans going to be coming out of hiding?
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
The editor saw through my not-very-cryptic reference to Spyderco.
http://www.KnifeSteelNerds.com - Steel Metallurgy topics related to knives
- legOFwhat?
- Member
- Posts: 3155
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2018 5:58 am
- Location: Kentucky; Earth
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Now I gotta get that book!
-Larry
Hebrews 13:6 So we may boldly say: “The Lord is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?”
MNOSD #0049
Hebrews 13:6 So we may boldly say: “The Lord is my helper; I will not fear. What can man do to me?”
MNOSD #0049
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Thanks for the link zhyla!
Thanks for the great vid Larrin!
Thanks for the great vid Larrin!
Of all the things I've lost I miss my mind the most!
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
The six steels Larrin mentioned with two in each category of High Toughness (14C28N, AEB-L), Balanced Steel (CPM-154, CPM-MagnaCut) and High Wear Resistance (CPM-S90V, CPM-S110V) are all Stainless Steels.
Word: “Edge Geometry is more important than Steel and Heat Treating”.
Word: “Edge Geometry is more important than Steel and Heat Treating”.
- I welcome dialog, as long as it remains cordial, constructive and is conducted in a civilized manner. - Titanic: Blood & Steel
- You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you cannot fool all of the people all of the time. - Abraham Lincoln
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I think a lot about Cliff Stamp saying in so many words to make the edge thinner until it starts to damage and then make it make it thicker until it stops damaging.
All SE all the time since 2017
~David
~David
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I wonder why H1 isn't ever on his charts?RamZar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 3:41 amThe six steels Larrin mentioned with two in each category of High Toughness (14C28N, AEB-L), Balanced Steel (CPM-154, CPM-MagnaCut) and High Wear Resistance (CPM-S90V, CPM-S110V) are all Stainless Steels.
Word: “Edge Geometry is more important than Steel and Heat Treating”.
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
It is. Most people give up scrolling down on the Edge Retention Chart to ever see it though.vivi wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 5:40 amI wonder why H1 isn't ever on his charts?RamZar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 3:41 amThe six steels Larrin mentioned with two in each category of High Toughness (14C28N, AEB-L), Balanced Steel (CPM-154, CPM-MagnaCut) and High Wear Resistance (CPM-S90V, CPM-S110V) are all Stainless Steels.
Word: “Edge Geometry is more important than Steel and Heat Treating”.
I'm kidding, I have always wondered the same thing. It think it is a very special steel and a super steel in its own right. Hopefully H2 will make his charts. My guess is it would be a 9 or even a 10 on the toughness scale with maybe a 2 or 3 on edge retention. Probably a 11 on corrosion resistance.
- Jeff
May your feet be warm and dry and your throat warm with whiskey. A knife in hand or in the sock band.
MNOSD Member #0005
May your feet be warm and dry and your throat warm with whiskey. A knife in hand or in the sock band.
MNOSD Member #0005
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I’m always surprised how little air time Vanax seems to get - it is very similar to Magnacut (slightly lower toughness but fractionally higher edge retention and corrosion resistance), at least on paper. I have a quiet carry drift in Vanax and a Magnacut mule and they really are very similar to live with
- Al
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
It's always been weird to me. I consider H1 the most impressive steel I've tried since my first 420 series knife and it's never mentioned on his charts, lists, etc.JSumm wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 5:52 amIt is. Most people give up scrolling down on the Edge Retention Chart to ever see it though.vivi wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 5:40 amI wonder why H1 isn't ever on his charts?RamZar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 3:41 amThe six steels Larrin mentioned with two in each category of High Toughness (14C28N, AEB-L), Balanced Steel (CPM-154, CPM-MagnaCut) and High Wear Resistance (CPM-S90V, CPM-S110V) are all Stainless Steels.
Word: “Edge Geometry is more important than Steel and Heat Treating”.
I'm kidding, I have always wondered the same thing. It think it is a very special steel and a super steel in its own right. Hopefully H2 will make his charts. My guess is it would be a 9 or even a 10 on the toughness scale with maybe a 2 or 3 on edge retention. Probably a 11 on corrosion resistance.
There's a single article on his site for H1 as far as I know. https://knifesteelnerds.com/2019/06/24/ ... -it-works/
It gives some interesting background information on steels similar to H1, but when you get to the meat of the article its a little disappointing how little hard info there is.
He mentions work hardening, but just says it doesn't make sense and dismisses it.
He mentions some people, Spyderco included, claiming SE H1 has better edge retention than you'd expect given the chemistry of the steel, but doesn't explore this at all.
He mentions sending in an H1 knife for RC analysis, but then mentions the edge RC numbers might be deflated because of the factory sharpening job....meaning it sounds like a brand new knife.
I dunno, I just feel like H1 warrants deeper investigation than this.
Like lets RC test a new Pacific Salt and a heavily sharpened one and compare results.
Lets do cut tests with PE and SE Pacific Salts in H1, then repeat the test with VG10 Endura 3's, and compare the edge holding difference percentages in each edge type for the respective steels.
Couple years ago Spyderco posted on their website that H1 SE outcut all the other steels they had tried. Period. That's a big statement to make about a steel with the chemical composition of H1 when they were using stuff like S90V in the same era. Maybe not in SE, but they at least had SE S60V and S30V knives at that time.
The way the article was worded made it sound like he hadn't actually used H1.
Last edited by vivi on Fri Aug 18, 2023 6:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I've always been interested in Vanax since I heard about it. But like with magnacut I'm waiting to see it in a reasonbly priced model that I'd use frequently.JoviAl wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 6:17 amI’m always surprised how little air time Vanax seems to get - it is very similar to Magnacut (slightly lower toughness but fractionally higher edge retention and corrosion resistance), at least on paper. I have a quiet carry drift in Vanax and a Magnacut mule and they really are very similar to live with
I'll be first in line for a Pacific Salt in either steel, so I can compare them to the H1 and LC200N versions.
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
What jumps out to me in that chart is how similar LC200N actually appearantly is to 14C28N - just slightly less though (LC "8.5" vs 14C "9") and, yes, noticeable even-more-rustproof, but I think for most people the "8.5" of 14C (vs "10" of LC) will be rustproof enough.
So I guess LC200N should be "the" choice in the "high toughness" category for folks who need extreme levels of corrosion resistance (and want ffg, which rules out H1 / H2)
Second thing about LC200N:
I can recall when it came out, it was said to have edge retention "like S30V" or at least "between VG10 and S30V" - I never found that to be true in my own use (as far as I can tell), but always that VG10 holds an edge longer than LC. Larrins charts suggest this too (LC "3", VG10 "4.5", S30V "6" in edge retention).
Now probably one could make use of the much higher toughness of LC over VG10 by giving an LC blade a more acute edge angle than VG10 could take and by THAT increase the edge retention of LC.
Top three going by pocket-time (update March 24):
- EDC: Endura thin red line ffg combo edge (VG10); Wayne Goddard PE (4V), Endela SE (VG10)
-Mountains/outdoors: Pac.Salt 1 SE (H1), Salt 2 SE (LC200N), and also Wayne Goddard PE (4V)
- EDC: Endura thin red line ffg combo edge (VG10); Wayne Goddard PE (4V), Endela SE (VG10)
-Mountains/outdoors: Pac.Salt 1 SE (H1), Salt 2 SE (LC200N), and also Wayne Goddard PE (4V)
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
Funny - I was just about to comment something similar about LC200! I was going to say that my H1 SE dragonfly seems to stay functionally sharp about as long as my LC200 SE Caribbean (if not longer). I was surprised to see LC200 rated at an edge retention of only 3, but I suppose if the edge angles and stock thicknesses haven’t been optimised for each steel in the test it somewhat brings the whole set of datapoints into question.Wartstein wrote: ↑Fri Aug 18, 2023 7:17 am
What jumps out to me in that chart is how similar LC200N actually appearantly is to 14C28N - just slightly less though (LC "8.5" vs 14C "9") and, yes, noticeable even-more-rustproof, but I think for most people the "8.5" of 14C (vs "10" of LC) will be rustproof enough.
So I guess LC200N should be "the" choice in the "high toughness" category for folks who need extreme levels of corrosion resistance (and want ffg, which rules out H1 / H2)
Second thing about LC200N:
I can recall when it came out, it was said to have edge retention "like S30V" or at least "between VG10 and S30V" - I never found that to be true in my own use (as far as I can tell), but always that VG10 holds an edge longer than LC. Larrins charts suggest this too (LC "3", VG10 "4.5", S30V "6" in edge retention).
Now probably one could make use of the much higher toughness of LC over VG10 by giving an LC blade a more acute edge angle than VG10 could take and by THAT increase the edge retention of LC.
- Al
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
I’m sure Larrin has considered this variable, so I’d be interested to hear if the edges of the blades/coupons were all sharpened to the same bte thickness and angle, or whether they were tested at optimised thicknesses and angles according to the data he presents in his book (which I’ve just ordered by the way and can’t wait to read in full).
- Al
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
PS - I’ve just re-read my first comment above and I may have inadvertently come across as dismissive of the data or the effort that went in to collating it (I’m not). I don’t mean to imply the data is not generally representative (all experiments need to be conducted methodically), I just wonder if we might get different results if blade edges were optimised for the steel’s innate characteristics.
- Al
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Work: Jumpmaster 2
Home: DF2 K390 Wharncliffe/DF2 Salt H1 SE and K390 Police 4 LW SE/15V Shaman
Dream knives -
Chinook in Magnacut (any era)
Manix 2 XL Salt in Magnacut
A larger Rockjumper in Magnacut SE
Re: “Best” steels video with Larrin
As far as Larrin's edge retention testing, the edge angles and blade thickness are not optimised for each steel because Larrin is trying to compare steels against each other while eliminating as many other varaiables as possible. Just to compare wear resistance of the steel.
In real life, we know we can change the edge angle to improve performance and/or buy knives where manufacturer's have optimised the thickness for a certain purpose.
On his website, he explains the process with the CATRA tester. This is his diagram from the website about the blanks and uniformity in the testing.
In real life, we know we can change the edge angle to improve performance and/or buy knives where manufacturer's have optimised the thickness for a certain purpose.
On his website, he explains the process with the CATRA tester. This is his diagram from the website about the blanks and uniformity in the testing.
- Jeff
May your feet be warm and dry and your throat warm with whiskey. A knife in hand or in the sock band.
MNOSD Member #0005
May your feet be warm and dry and your throat warm with whiskey. A knife in hand or in the sock band.
MNOSD Member #0005