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  2. Amazon's No. 1 bestselling knife sharpener is on sale - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/kitchellence-knife...

    Even if you use a sharpening steel every time you cut through a tomato or chop celery, each slice slowly dulls the blade. ... a new sharp set, consider that this knife sharpener has over 20,000 ...

  3. Tumbler knife sharpener review, after weeks of testing - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/tumbler-knife-sharpener-review...

    Tumbler Knife Sharpener $129.00 at Amazon. Tumbler Knife Sharpener $98.00 at Tumbler. The Tumbler knife sharpener ($129) is a manual knife sharpener with two components: a two-sided rolling disc ...

  4. List of blade materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_blade_materials

    The 10xx series is the most popular choice for carbon steel used in knives as well as katanas. They can take and keep a very sharp edge. [59] 1095, a popular high-carbon steel for knives; it is harder but more brittle than lower-carbon steels such as 1055, 1060, 1070, and 1080.

  5. Spyderco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spyderco

    In 1994, it was the first company to use powder metallurgy in a production knife (in the form of Crucible's S60V tool steel), and the first knife company to use H-1 steel in a folding knife. [16] The Mule Team Project offers end users fixed-blade knife in various steels for the performance testing. [17] Spyderco's current Steel Chart PDF.

  6. Knife sharpening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knife_sharpening

    Knife sharpener in Kabul, Afghanistan (1961) The Knife Grinder by Massimiliano Soldani (c.1700), Albertinum, Dresden A railway camp cook sharpens a knife blade on a stone wheel, 1927. Knife sharpening is the process of making a knife or similar tool sharp by grinding against a hard, rough surface, typically a stone, [1] or a flexible surface ...

  7. Sharpening stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharpening_stone

    The term is based on the word "whet", which means to sharpen a blade, [3] [4] not on the word "wet". The verb nowadays to describe the process of using a sharpening stone for a knife is simply to sharpen, but the older term to whet is still sometimes used, though so rare in this sense that it is no longer mentioned in, for example, the Oxford Living Dictionaries.

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