tanaka blue #2 love

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these are my very first carbon blades, very nice grind, stupid stupid thin behind the edge.
210 gyuto and 105 petty, just got them back after rehandle.

gyuto: black micarta ferrule, cherry handle, octaval shape (octagonal bevels on top, rounded on bottom half)
petty: black micarta handle with blue g-10 spacer

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Got the same 210, with the necessary re handle. Beast
 
Love the petty... Do you happen to know if the micarta is paper,canvas, or linen?
 
Nice! I just put mine on the stones last week...STUPID sharp!! :)

Enjoy it!

Chris
 
I have the petty but sold my 240 to a good friend who desperately needed a decent knife. Every now and again I get the urge to get another gyuto.
 
Are these knives made by Tanaka-san as head of the family, or previous knives?
 
kazuki Tanaka Has Passed Away! most blue#2 Tanaka knives made by Shigeki Tanaka.......
 
Are these knives made by Tanaka-san as head of the family, or previous knives?
kazuki Tanaka Has Passed Away! most blue#2 Tanaka knives made by Shigeki Tanaka.......
I'm well aware, and that doesn't answer my question at all. Do you read?

Very nice! :nono: I don't think cclin was trying to insult your knife knowledge, ER, so why the sarcasm? People can read and understand what you say when your own writing is clear, and your first message is not.
 
I'm well aware, and that doesn't answer my question at all. Do you read?

EdipisReks, even though I misunderstanding your question; is that really necessary for rudeness??

@panda, sorry for this off topic post!!
 
EdipisReks, even though I misunderstanding your question; is that really necessary for rudeness??

isn't the first time this has happened.
 
edipis, not sure i understand your question, previous knives? got all my tanakas from metalmaster. waiting on a ginsanko petty with octagon handle from 330mate. the g3 line is vastly different from the carbon, different profile and grind. believe it or not, i prefer the tanaka stainless gyuto over my newly acquired shigefusa.
 
panda how do the stainless Tanaka (G3 or VG10?) compare to your Shig and blue Tanaka?
 
pros of
g3 tanaka: low nose pointy tip flat profile, food release, edge retention
shig: silky smooth cutting, feels like perfect balance of size/weight, easy to sharpen (takes a burr in 1 (one!) stroke on 400 grit)
blue tanaka: extremely thin behind the edge, light but not whippy/flex seems to work 'fast'

i like all 3 for their own reasons, but the g3 is my absolute favorite (pro kitchen use), i use the blue tanaka at home.
my shig still needs more work (thinning) but i'll use it for when i want more precise & thinner cuts.
 
So how is the cutting performance for the G3? I ask because I sold a friend of mine my blue Tanaka and he loves the way it cuts and has just enough weight (versus the Sakai Yusuke he had prior) for chopping, but is thinking taking care of carbon steel isn't his thing. Trying to find something that cuts like the blue Tanaka, wa handle, stainless, and roughly the same price is not easy. As for me I bought a Shig as it seemed to be everything I liked about my Ginga and Tanaka blue in one knife, havne't used it enough to determine if it is yet though. Personally I loved my time with the Tanaka blue, but I really disliked the profile. If they made a profile like a Shig/Masamota KS I'd buy it in heartbeat and never buy another knife.
 
i wish there was a taller version of KS with blue steel, i'd try that in a heart beat. if you have the patience to wait maybe give the stainless yusuke 'thick' ks profiled version a try?

cutting performance of the g3 is remarkable, the weight of the blade and its geometry along with fine grained very keen edge glides through food almost feels like cheating really. despite being a heavier knife i exert less energy with it than that of any other knife i have (ie the knife does all the work for you, you just steer, that's how efficient of a cutter i feel it is, but mind you this has been thinned behind the edge considerably). the initial off the stone sharpness goes away within first use, but it stays very sharp for a long time, and comes right back to piercing soft tomato skin with simple stropping. i've only touched it up twice in the last two months and i use this thing more than all of my other ones COMBINED.

the thing with tanaka, is that you get a top notch steel and heat treat + grind for a way bellow market price of that quality because the fit & finish is horrible. there probably just is not much hand work involved in these blades. but once you tweak it to your preferences, i feel it belongs in the higher end class. in other words, there's no way you're going to get this level in the same price bracket.


re: profile
i also had a 240 g3 which i passed along to one of my cooks (who i kid you not used it to break down a WHOLE pork belly while semi frozen still, lol) i really hated its profile, too much belly, and actually a few mm taller than my 270 (absolutely love the 270s profile btw). i'm thinking though that since these are all hand made, each profile varies a bit maybe a lot even among the same lengths.
 
Taller blue steel version of the KS? I believe this what kochi has been described as. Ofcourse it's not that simple..but it's worth looking into
 
edipis, not sure i understand your question, previous knives? got all my tanakas from metalmaster. waiting on a ginsanko petty with octagon handle from 330mate. the g3 line is vastly different from the carbon, different profile and grind. believe it or not, i prefer the tanaka stainless gyuto over my newly acquired shigefusa.

you don't understand the question either, is all. More than one Tanaka, and one is now dead.
 
Taller blue steel version of the KS? I believe this what kochi has been described as. Ofcourse it's not that simple..but it's worth looking into
IIRC, all Kochi knives made with V2 steel, escept 240mm Kiritsuke-Shaped Gyuto..
 

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