More traditional blade profile.
Ordered mine last night.
Shipped today
https://www.bladehq.com/?search=autonomy+2
Ordered mine last night.
Shipped today
https://www.bladehq.com/?search=autonomy+2
More traditional blade profile.
Ordered mine last night.
Shipped today
https://www.bladehq.com/?search=autonomy+2 View attachment 154875
Prolly do a box opening vid on this and my incoming microtech halo 6Interested in a 'range report' when you get it Craigntx
Prolly do a box opening vid on this and my incoming microtech halo 6
Iron is not steel without carbon. Instead of increasing carbon to make high carbon steel that makes harder steel, nitrides (alloy) from nitrogen can be added to increase hardness, but it's usually used to harden austenitic stainless steel where the chromium and nickle properties can keep it from becoming too brittle. My concern would be how easy it would be to sharpen.Oh my goodness. Looky there.
I haven't heard of Lc200n blade steel before.
It's a nitrogen-alloy steel. So instead of it being carbon steel. It's 'nitrogen steel'. It's suppose to be some serious stuff.
https://knifesteelnerds.com/2018/09/17/nitrogen-alloyed-knife-steels/
Iron is not steel without carbon. Instead of increasing carbon to make high carbon steel that makes harder steel, nitrides (alloy) from nitrogen can be added to increase hardness, but it's usually used to harden austenitic stainless steel where the chromium and nickle properties can keep it from becoming too brittle. My concern would be how easy it would be to sharpen.
Iron is not steel without carbon. Instead of increasing carbon to make high carbon steel that makes harder steel, nitrides (alloy) from nitrogen can be added to increase hardness, but it's usually used to harden austenitic stainless steel where the chromium and nickle properties can keep it from becoming too brittle. My concern would be how easy it would be to sharpen.
Austenitic stainless steel is hard to grind, let alone sharpen.Had to re-read that sentence. My eyes saw autistic stainless the first time,
Eeeeeeexxxcellent.Austenitic stainless steel is hard to grind, let alone sharpen.
Not worried about re-sharpening.. My concern would be how easy it would be to sharpen.
Iron is not steel without carbon. Instead of increasing carbon to make high carbon steel that makes harder steel, nitrides (alloy) from nitrogen can be added to increase hardness, but it's usually used to harden austenitic stainless steel where the chromium and nickle properties can keep it from becoming too brittle. My concern would be how easy it would be to sharpen.
The grinding wheels I was talking about have man made diamond in it, and yes, I have tried to sharpen austenitic stainless steel knives with a diamond sharpener. I haven't tried to sharpen one of those that you were talking about, I was wondering if they would sharpen like those stainless steel knives I had sharpened.Have you noticed the abundance of diamond grit sharpeners? Where a stone would cut older steels. Now it takes a diamonds to make any progress in sharpening it.