Elements of Sharpening

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jgraeff

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So i have been thinking quite a bit about sharpening and what most people/chef don't realize is that one properly sharpened knife is a very useful tool and a poorly sharpened knife is utterly useless even if it costs an absurd amount.

For instance, i have started a local sharpening business around here nothing major but for some chefs and a couple restaurants locally. Anyways i was mentioning it to my co-workes and telling them what i charge etc and asking if anyone was interested. My chef started to ask questions and was completely dumfounded that i said id want $5 per knife(240mm+). I said well u know its done all by hand on stones no grinders or anything, and he says id rather use my pull through sharpener. He has a knife that is worth $200 and has never properly sharpened it. The geometry is ruined do to using these pull through sharpeners its rather frustrating.

Anyways i told him id take it and do it for free just to get his opinion. Took me a while to get the profile back to good condition and some thinning behind the edge before i could even start sharpening it. i went from 400-2k synthetic and then finished it on jnats. Next day i gave it back to him and later admitted he was quite surprised by how well it cut and how even the bevel was along the edge.

I also had another guy i work with start giving me a hard time about that it isn't hard to sharpen knives and that he'd never pay for it as well. Which he actually does a decent job of sharpening his own. But we got to discussing the methods and techniques. He is they type who is always going to disagree with you.

I said well if you sharpen the knife and don't fully remove the burr, then you can have a sharp edge to start but it'll quickly degrade as if a wire edge. He disagreed saying that it'll wear off by normal use and that it wouldn't affect the edge retention.

We also discussed sharpness from angles vs grit. I told him i believe that both are equally important due to the type of steel involved and of course he disagreed saying that not matter what knife you use if you use a constant angle and grit medium it should provide the same edge.

Basically whether I'm right or wrong isn't what I'm getting at but i started thinking about how much goes into sharpening a single knife...most people say its just removing metal with a stone. which I'm sure anyone can get decent results but i know that i have come an extremely long way with my sharpening since i started and since i learned and experimented. On my personal work knives i can easily go a full month without feeling like needing to resharpen my knives, last year i was doing it every three days or so. I can also get the edge much sharper as well as toothier so that it holds up better.
 
Yep. I can't tell you how many times I've heard "No, we sharpen our own knives. They're pretty sharp." And I glance over at the prep station and it takes everything in me to not say "Um, no they aren't."

I always tell people that yeah you can use a rod or a pull through, but eventually you need a new edge put on it. Also, I fix them when they are broken. That's usually reasonable enough to satisfy the chef's/husband's testicular flexing and get me some knives to sharpen.

It's best to just cast a wide net, cut your losses on people who are like that guy, and do what it takes to be likable and get a sharpened knife in someone's hand.

As far as people scoffing at the price, those people only want handouts. I mean, seriously, $5 a knife?? How much LESS do they want to pay? There are not a lot of numbers under 5.
 
I'm at a $1/ edge inch and all are happy with the results and plenty of repeats. The line I always hear is "most people don't know sharp, let me show you".....ok.....then I have to politely ask to "see if I can improve on that edge" and hand it back praying they don't "cut their hand off"...(Julia)...It really scares me to watch someone use a really sharp knife when all they have ever known is their "sharp."
 
When I went restaurant to restaurant in my sharpening van I just about grew to hate the business. I was competing with either house knife rental/lease services or "the other guy in the van". Both offered faster service for far less cost. The best I could do was 60 knives an hour on site for a few dollars per knife and even this wasn't good enough. The quality of the work being performed was irrelevant.

Funny story, one time I ran into "the other guy in the van" at one of my stops, I was surprised and thrilled because I could meet another sharpener and see how he does things. I had a pretty big van but his was nearly twice the length of mine so I was dying to see what he had inside that thing. When I hopped up in to introduce myself I almost fell backwards at what I saw for equipment.....1 Tru-Hone (giant sized Chef's Choice)....that's it! I'm not making this up either, that's all this guy had in his truck, a pull through device and the rest was all bench space, this just blew my mind. Turns out the guy was a butt head and not as happy to see me as I was to see him. :)
 
The best I could do was 60 knives an hour on site for a few dollars per knife and even this wasn't good enough. The quality of the work being performed was irrelevant.

At 60/hr you're SMOKIN!!!! I think the most I have EVER done was 50 in a day.
 
At 60/hr you're SMOKIN!!!! I think the most I have EVER done was 50 in a day.


In my van, where everything was set up to perfection, I could do that when I needed to but the reality is that only the real big places offered that many at once. It was real common to do 30 in a 1/2 hr though and it's funny to think that some people thought I was too slow at that pace.
 
Yeah, know the feeling.

Me also went from a restaurant to restaurant to look for funny exotic blades to sharpen. Even though I would say I just want one to show you guys what sharp is, they would refuse.

Once I went to "the best sushi place in the city".... They sharpened their own knives. I noticed one of the chefs cuts sashimi with global chefs knife, and had no other knives around. I left.

Now I basically dont care anymore. I dont have enough time to sharpen shite knives, I pick carefully the things I will sharpen and polish, and get to know the owner s of them, so I can find out what how they use their knives. For those wisemen price aint a problem.
But I also know those folks who wants to earn in the industry but dont want to spend money on proper tools maintenance.
 
In my first quarter of school (about to enter my second, first in the kitchen), and I told one of my classmate/buddies about how we got 15% by being students. Later he went in to pick some stuff up and sharpen his Mercer's, but told me that they wouldn't apply that 15% to their sharpening service.

I asked how much they charged, and he said $3 per knife. I thought I heard him say $3, but it didn't make any sense. "Thirty dollars?," I said..."No, $3," he said, "I wouldn't want to pay more than that."

I didn't really didn't know much about knives at this point. Didn't know about stone sharpening versus whatever it is they use at SLT (diamond something?). But I was shocked he would mention that the 15% discount didn't apply to that price.
 
Shameful how they rip off students like that! Of coarse, pulling the knife through the chef's choice they should pay him.
 
Sorry, I meant that's what they charge at SLT. We have our own stones at school, though not many people use them. I will when given the chance. My buddy said he wouldn't want to pay more than $3 at SLT and was disappointed they didn't apply his 15% discount there. I thought he was crazy. He's definately not a knife nut. I told him about what I dropped on a Carter and he about crapped himself, though he wants to give it a test drive.

He's not really what I would call and underpriveleged kid, so $3 per knife really shoulnd't have been a problem for him. He doesn't like stones because he feels it takes too much time.
 
Ya some people think that it is easy, and will always try to get free stuff.
 
Ya some people think that it is easy, and will always try to get free stuff.

I think this applies to almost any skilled service because the people who are good at what they do make it look easy - and at least where life & limb aren't at stake, the people who don't know what they're doing know enough to BS it.
 
These must be some of the cheapest people in the world. I bet half those people would go and pay 5 bucks for a "meal" at McDonalds (which is essentially the same in quality before it goes in your body as when it comes out), but they go and complain about a 3 dollar knife sharpening service. That's pretty sad...
 
I bet its easier to get customers now than in the 1920s heyday of travelling sharpeners...everyone had decent carbon steel and an actual whetstone. It'd be like trying to get paid to wash windshields today.
 
at my last job everybody told me it was impossible to create a perfect 20 degree angle on both sides of the edge because of human error. thats why chefs choice systems were superior. its unfortunate sometimes working in the industry but being surrounded by fools who believe in whatever nonsense theyve heard-where does miseducation like that come from?
 
at my last job everybody told me it was impossible to create a perfect 20 degree angle on both sides of the edge because of human error. thats why chefs choice systems were superior. its unfortunate sometimes working in the industry but being surrounded by fools who believe in whatever nonsense theyve heard-where does miseducation like that come from?

From folks who are trying to make a sale, even with junk stuff to peddle.

Vested interest almost always makes folks lower their moral compass just enough to make it 'alright' to pass off inadequate tripe.

It is rare to find folks who won't stoop to that kind of activity, but surprisingly there are a bunch of them here. ;)

Stu.
 
at my last job everybody told me it was impossible to create a perfect 20 degree angle on both sides of the edge because of human error. thats why chefs choice systems were superior. its unfortunate sometimes working in the industry but being surrounded by fools who believe in whatever nonsense theyve heard-where does miseducation like that come from?

Just ask them where they learned that.
 
I run into this all the time. At work we just got a new service that ruins... er... Sharpens/rents knives. My co-workers love how "sharp" they are but don't like how ling the edges last. these guys are sharpening way to low an angle for the quality of steel. These knives look like victonox knock offs but have all the stamps so I'm not sure whats up with them. I pull out my Victornox 13" scimitar and they freak out, "wow that sharp" but to me it's almost dull as a butter knife (haven't used it in a year). So I started sharpening the house knife I'm going to use at my station, boss gets nervous about my 13"er, and my co-workers don't understand why I'm sharpening a "sharp" knife. Because it's not sharp...

Funny thing is that when I go to lunch and get back... there is a different knife at my station... oh well...
 
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