Quote from: John_B on June 06, 2026, 01:13:00 AMQuote from: RichColvin on June 06, 2026, 12:10:04 AMWhen I hear concerns about using the KS-123 due to it being less than needed accuracy, I wonder why the angle on the blade must be accurate to 0.1°. In the sharpening I do for most things, if the angle is good to +/- 1 degree I am good. What am I missing?
Nothing.
I think this is an example of going to the extreme without any clear delineation of the benifit. When Wootz proposed some new idea he backed it up with extensive testing and real world usage in meat packing plants. I believe only a miniscule number of users have the ability to measure the angle to this accuracy.
If I may introduce a modicum of nuance and open-mindedness to "Nothing" :
- I agree being able to measure the edge angle with 0.1° precision has no benefit in terms of sharpness or edge retention
- However, being able to reproduce a given angle quickly with the smallest deviation possible results in raising a burr much faster, with less metal removal.
As we are talking small angles, the amount of metal being removed is proportional to the ratio of angles : you remove 5 times more metal if you're 1° off compared with .2° off. It is to me a clear delineation of the benefit. [EDIT] Actually, much more than this if you take into account cases where you will be thinning the blade [/EDIT]