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Quote from: BPalv on July 15, 2026, 02:48:57 PMIn regards to the original post. I have sharpened for customers at 20, 17 and 15 degrees primarily. I now sharpen pretty much any decent kitchen knife to 15 degrees... They always come back to me needing sharpened. That's to say, I can't tell if one angle held up better or not.Great that this thread grew, It has been just over a month since I decided on 15 degrees and its serving me well. I am fully mobile with 2 T8's one with a 200 grit CBN and one with a 1000 grit CBN. Unless a customer asks for a specific angle, 15 degrees it is and up to now, no complaints. I also have a microscope I use to check some knives for chips as my eyesight, even with glasses is not too good.
All but the cheapest steel should be stable at 15%. Wootz or Larin showed the sharper the knife is, the longer it stays sharp. The geometry allows a sharper edge at 15°.
In the grand scheme of things, it doesn't matter. 90% of your customers won't know or care what angle they are sharpened to.
) I try to get my customers on an email list and check in every 3-4 weeks for feedback, not one complaint up to now and lots of compliments on edge retention. I tried a test with the KS123 by sharpening a knife, unclamping it, re-clamping it and setting the angle back to 15 degrees and before sharpening, do the sharpie test and scrape the blade as if recreating the edge for a customer, it was super close to the previous sharpening angle of 15 degrees, just a hair off, and I tested it under the microscope which made me happy.Quote from: John_B on Yesterday at 08:24:47 PMThe only people that have discussed sharpening angles with me sharpen their own knives.



























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