Masamoto KS info to pass on

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mpukas

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I've just discovered some new info to pass on to you KS freaks (at least it's new news to me).

I've recently been recalling this thread from Fred's from a coupe of years ago that Chris Lehrer started about a clad blade in Masamoto's catalog. He was questioning why the same knife made with san mai construction is more expensive that the mono-steel version.

As it turns out, Masamoto does make a clad version of the KS wa-gyuto, the KS29xx sereis. The KS31xx sereis is the mono-steel version. I e-mailed Koki, and these are his replies;



Thank you very much for your inqiury and interest.

Yes. Today we just confirmed information about below items.

Massamoto
KS-3124 Wa Gyuto 240mm (Solid White Steel #2 blade)
HRC 61 to 62
Blade Spine Thickness 3mm

KS-2924 Wa Gyuto 240mm (San-Mai, Cladding blade. Blade core White Steel #2)
HRC 62 to 63
Blade Spine Thickness 4.3mm

Masamoto explains both of above knives are through traditional hammer forging proces. Masamoto explains KS-2924 Wa Gyuto 240mm has thicker blade, and has higher HRC. (Also KS-2924 has higher price too)

...

Yes. From the Masamoto’s information KS-2924 has same blade shape as KS-3124.

The KS-2924 has Cladding blade, blade core is made of White Steel #2 sandwiched with soft iron. The entire blade has possibility to get and discolor, also especially the blade core part has possibility to get discolor from the acid ingredients foods such as onion, lemon.




So the KS31xx and KS29xx have the same profile. And interesting to discover that the KS31xx series are hand forged (did not know), not cut and ground from bar stock, the way most all other mono-steel knives I'm familiar with are made. That would explain a slightly higher cost over a similar mono-steel knife from another company.

Just sharing the love. Cheers! mpp
 
News to me. Good info bro, thanks for sharing.
 
I would agree that I expected the clad blade to be less. I thought this was due to materials cost: white steel being much more expensive than the cladding. It seems to me they often use scrap iron for the cladding, which could be free. So a whole knife of white steel would have a greater cost than a San Mai blade. Though, it may be more labor intensive.
I guess, all in all, it doesn't matter much why; they will charge what they charge.
 
traditional san-mai (i'm making the assumption that these knives are done by hand, and that Masamoto isn't just buying a steel sandwich) construction is more labor intensive than heat treating a piece of metal and grinding it to shape. hand made items are typically not all that sensitive to bulk materials costs, when it comes to determining retail prices.
 
wow, this could easily fall into the "kitchen knife misconception thread" soon. so if the traditional san mai in this instance is more costly than the mono steel process, im curious what advantages the san mai could have over the mono steel.
 
wow, this could easily fall into the "kitchen knife misconception thread" soon. so if the traditional san mai in this instance is more costly than the mono steel process, im curious what advantages the san mai could have over the mono steel.

similar advantages to those mizu-honyaki has over simple monosteel.
 
wow, this could easily fall into the "kitchen knife misconception thread" soon. so if the traditional san mai in this instance is more costly than the mono steel process, im curious what advantages the san mai could have over the mono steel.
The cladded knife is thicker which means the grind can be more convexed which could improve the performance.
 
Again, note the both the KS29 & KS31 versions are hammered forged - the mono-steel knives are not cut and ground from stock. Saying that, I think the price difference comes down to it being easier to hammer out a blade from a single piece of steel as opposed to forge welding a steel sandwich.

The san mai blade also has higher hardness. As I understand mono-steel blades are limited in their hardness capacities, unless honyaki of course, because as hardness increases so does brittleness. The san mai blade can be a higher hardness on the cutting steel which will take a sharper edge and hold it longer, while not being a brittle knife.
 
Just found out f/ Koki that a KS2924 san-mai wa-gyuto 240mm is...


wait for it...


$575
 
That's actually less than when I inquired with Koki in the past.
 
That's interesting. Neat to know they make the same knife in both styles. Odd how the honyaki knife is cheaper. They usually are not. I've never understood the whole honyaki thing personally. It's nothing magical to deferentially heat treat a knife. Spread some clay on the top third or so and harden. I understand the materials are higher but less labour as you don't need to forge weld. People go on about they're more expensive because there's a bigger rejection rate. Please. That's how all American bladesmiths make their knives and they don't seem to have a problem. The only one I know of who makes san-mai blades is Burt Foster and he charges a premium for them because of the extra work. I'm not trying to start an argument here but it's something I've never understood the obsession with a blade that isn't clad in different steel. But thanks for the info
 
There is a difference between mono steel and honyaki. A masamoto honyaki is over $1000. The differential heat treatment allows for a harder edge without a knife that is too brittle
 
I was under the impression there were two ways honyaki were used. Monosteel with all blade hardness and monosteel with differential hardness which usually has a hamon line if it's a shallow hardening steel. Still don't see the big deal. Go onto bladeforums right now and I bet at least 5 of the knives on the first page of the makers' forum are differentially heat treated I bet. I agree they look nice with that line. Maybe it's harder with kitchen knives because they're so thin? I
 
it's my understanding that thinner knives are much more likely to warp when water quenched.
 
True. Actually I'd think the hitachi steels would have less problem with this as the very high carbon content allows a lower hardening temp. But why do people go all gaga over honyaki knives. I mean the performance wouldn't be better. They're harder to sharpen. They're very expensive. And once you sharpen to the hamon they're a paperweight even though that would take a lifetime of use. And I think san-mai blades look better with the contrast you get between the hagane and jigane. Different strokes I guess. Actually the whole differential heat treat thing doesn't make sense. For outdoor knives yes but in the kitchen they don't see heavy enough of use for a softer spine to be necessary. Brittleness only matters at the edge which this style of making doesn't affect
 
A honyaki blade can snap in half rather easily. The softer spine adds overall strength.
 
True. Actually I'd think the hitachi steels would have less problem with this as the very high carbon content allows a lower hardening temp. But why do people go all gaga over honyaki knives. I mean the performance wouldn't be better. They're harder to sharpen. They're very expensive. And once you sharpen to the hamon they're a paperweight even though that would take a lifetime of use. And I think san-mai blades look better with the contrast you get between the hagane and jigane. Different strokes I guess. Actually the whole differential heat treat thing doesn't make sense. For outdoor knives yes but in the kitchen they don't see heavy enough of use for a softer spine to be necessary. Brittleness only matters at the edge which this style of making doesn't affect

why do i get the impression that you haven't ever used a honyaki kitchen knife, or every seen what a kitchen can dish out?
 
I haven't used a honyaki knife. That's what I'm trying to figure out. As I said not starting an argument just generally want to know. I'm not a pro chef just an overachieving home cook :). But I do cut things in my kitchen and I know the edge is the only thing that touches anything or at least that's all that should. For a knife to snap in half I can't think of what could cause that but if that's the case I'd think the hardness is a little too high to be a good knife. Like not tempered at all. But I truly don't know. I do have an EDC knife I carry all day every day and use it a lot harder than a kitchen knife and it's 01 at 63-64 HRC and ground to .012 behind the edge and I haven't broken it in half. I just can't see a kitchen being harder on a knife than a construction site. Obviously people with more experience know better. Just my take on things. But that doesn't answer why honyaki knives are so sought after
 
unless you chip gravel with your EDC, i don't think a construction site is going to be tougher than a pro kitchen, by any means.

my Honyaki is awesome, and i own and have owned and have used a lot of top tier knives, mostly very good san-mai. best edge i've used. the other honyakis i've used have been similar. just as there is much more to a sportscar than 0-62, there is a lot more to a knife than hardness. even regarding hardness and fracturibility, you have to keep in mind that kitchen knives tend to be much thinner for larger percentages of section than a skinner or EDC. that means they are much more likely to fracture if, say, somebody tries to cut through a back bone with a hard knife.
 
Ok. I also assume being that they're the smith's top tier line they also get a lot more care and attention to detail as their lower lines( not saying their lower lines are sub-par.) What's so hard about a kitchen on knives as far as wear and tear? I mean you're cutting soft material that as far as I know isn't abrasive like rope and other fibrous materials. As a home cook I know I can take my time and I'm easy on them. But the only thing my kitchen knives touch is food and wood. And I agree on there being more than hardness. I just used it as an example. Overall heat treat and steel quality are very important but at least hardness numbers are an objective thing you can go off of(generally). Not to mention grind and geometry and such. If you thought I was in some way downgrading honyaki knives that wasn't the case. Just asking questions and since it seemed this thread was already pretty much dead it'd be a good place
 
go cut up some rutabagas or 50 pounds of leeks and then tell me that they aren't abrasive.
 
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