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Looking for a good manual knife sharpener

Super Mech

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This might belong in Free Parking. Looking for recommendations on a manual knife sharpener for kitchen knives. Nothing too expensive, meaning 50.00 and under. Knives are USA and German steel.
 
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topcok88

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I’d suggest a Spyderco Tri-Angle Sharpmaker. MSRP around $105 but you may be able to find a sale that brings it down to around $70. Pretty versatile system that can be used for more than just knives and doesn’t take up much space when in its storage case.


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measuredtwice

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Crabman

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My dad was into Asian cooking. He was in Korea during the war and my mom was stationed in Tokyo, so they both liked Asian food.

He bought some Mac Japanese knives for prep work. They are really nice, some over 50 years old and the sharpest knives I own, and I own a lot as I love to cook.

I bought the Mac sharpener for dad's knives:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000RKT41Y/?tag=atomicindus08-20

It is modestly priced and I use it on all my knives with a lot of success.

Bruce
 

mike93lx

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I have the lansky system and haven't gotten great results on kitchen knives. Probably a technique issue, still fruatrating
 

Mgdoug3

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I just use a basic diamond stone, a super fine ceramic stone followed by a leather strap with some sort of polishing compound. I don't know what the compound I'd though. My roommate in college got it for me because we both enjoyed sharpening knives. That was ten years ago and still have 95% of the bar left. It should last me a lifetime.
 

gnpenning

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I have more questions than answers.
Fine Arkansas Stone. Then leather strop.

For my shop tools, a couple pieces of granite with multiple grits of PSA sandpaper up to 4000 grit on each one, then strop. Fast and easy to match to how full to the sharpness needed. Every new-used chisel, plane, etc. Even pocket knives
I get gets both sides as needed till I'm happy.
 

LB-1911

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Super Mech

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Thanks for all the responses. I’m liking the Lansbury setup bit looks like it would need a bit of practice to be done properly. I also think it would be much easier to use if I purchase the stand that goes with it.
I really wanted the convenience of a pull type sharpener though.
 

seber

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My dad was into Asian cooking. He was in Korea during the war and my mom was stationed in Tokyo, so they both liked Asian food.

He bought some Mac Japanese knives for prep work. They are really nice, some over 50 years old and the sharpest knives I own, and I own a lot as I love to cook.

I bought the Mac sharpener for dad's knives:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000RKT41Y/?tag=atomicindus08-20

It is modestly priced and I use it on all my knives with a lot of success.

Bruce

If you like your knives you want to stay well away from this type of sharpener.
These things use carbide blades to shave a lot of material from the blade. Use it often and you will need to replace your knives soon.
 

mike93lx

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Thanks for all the responses. I’m liking the Lansbury setup bit looks like it would need a bit of practice to be done properly. I also think it would be much easier to use if I purchase the stand that goes with it.
I really wanted the convenience of a pull type sharpener though.

For the lansky you need the plastic tower at a minimum. You can hold that with your other hand, but I find it way better to screw it down to a board that I can clamp to my kitchen table
 

orangeblood

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Anybody have experience / recommend the Work Sharp system?

I have read good things about it for knives but dont know anybody that has one.
 

exmaxima1

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exmaxima1

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anndel

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I have the Spyderco Tri-Angle sharpener since the 1990s. I've added Spyderco's diamond stones and also replaced the medium stone since I dropped it on the floor and it broke.
 

Jack84

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I like the Lansky system. I get it sharp enough to shave with. ALWAYS strop. Biggest step I missed for years. I just use green rouge and cardboard.



I use the Lansky too, always strop after sharpening. Occasionally stropping helps keep your blade sharp, the stones take material off. Stropping doesn’t.

The Lansky works on Elmax too which surprised me a bit.


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exmaxima1

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How well do these knives hold an edge? I like the fact that they are USA made and the price is very reasonable.

The specs say the steel is type T420, which is the crappiest steel available so don't expect them to stay sharp very long. It's the same steel that's used in all those cheap steak knife sets you see all over for a few bucks. However, since they are so soft they lend themselves to those simple sharpening tools that scrape the edge (rather than honing) to sharpen them. That cheap tool with the 2 metal wheels will work very effectively, but you will be using it pretty regularly.
 

Legion Prime

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That sharpener indeed works fine for most kitchen knives and basic pocket knives (for example, Buck or Swiss Army type). It will ruin a fancy Japanese kitchen knife, or a pricy pocket knife with modern steel such as Spyderco/Benchmade/Zero Tolerance.

Nah, they'll ruin any knife you use them on. The cheaper they are the faster they'll ruin them.
Just go with the Lansky, for under $50 it's hard to beat without spending a TON of time learning to sharpen freehand. Do you need the base stand? Absolutely not, will it make things easier? It can, I've been perfectly happy sharpening without the base though for the better part of a decade now.
 

gatlibs

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How well do these knives hold an edge? I like the fact that they are USA made and the price is very reasonable.

They don't last as long as fancy knives, but a few quick swipes and they are just as sharp. I much more willing to swipe the blade in the sharpener than the card in the register. Usually, it is long to hold an edge or quick to make an edge.
 

exmaxima1

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Nah, they'll ruin any knife you use them on. The cheaper they are the faster they'll ruin them.
Just go with the Lansky, for under $50 it's hard to beat without spending a TON of time learning to sharpen freehand. Do you need the base stand? Absolutely not, will it make things easier? It can, I've been perfectly happy sharpening without the base though for the better part of a decade now.

I have a Lansky set and it excels for smaller knives under 5", but trying to sharpen a long chef knife is a pain on the Lansky. If the OP opts for knives using cheaper soft steel those simple sharpeners where you just drag the blade thru are very fast and efficient. Many "self sharpening" knife blocks now have similar systems integrated into the block---every time you remove the knife from the block it puts a fresh edge on the blade.

There are 2 types of drag sharpeners: those that use hardened blades to scrape the edge, and those that use a pair of ceramic rods to hone the edge. Better knives, like Henkels and Wusthof, do better with the ceramic rods. Some sharpeners, like those made by Wustof, employ both both schemes.
 

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JR 42

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Speaking pretty broadly, American kitchen knives aren't the state of the art. Typically low- end stainless, not very hard, difficult to sharpen well and won't hold an edge long. Seems to me like most German kitchen knives trend toward the American model (the Japanese knives are generally much harder, more fragile, last longer e.g.)

If you've got a lot of research time, mosey over to Bladeforums and read up.

If not, be honest about your skill level and look into a guided kit with diamond stones like Lansky, Gatco, or DMT offer to fix your edges (or diamond or silicon carbide stones if you're up for it), plus a ceramic crock stick setup like the Spyderco Sharpmaker for edge maintenance. You'll need to bump your budget up a bit, but used correctly this stuff should last for years and years

I use a mix of Japanese waterstones, American stones, guided diamond (DMT kit) and a Sharpmaker, and I'm no sharpening guru- it takes time to build these skills, and I don't spend enough time to be good at it yet.

Pull- through sharpeners are all **** IMO- if you're lucky they pull a stout wire edge that doesn't break off immediately.
 
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Legion Prime

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I have a Lansky set and it excels for smaller knives under 5", but trying to sharpen a long chef knife is a pain on the Lansky. If the OP opts for knives using cheaper soft steel those simple sharpeners where you just drag the blade thru are very fast and efficient. Many "self sharpening" knife blocks now have similar systems integrated into the block---every time you remove the knife from the block it puts a fresh edge on the blade.

This is true, I use it to sharpen my 8" Victorinox and that's about as long a knife as I'd want to deal with using it. My 10" Fujiwara? I don't think so. LOL

There are 2 types of drag sharpeners: those that use hardened blades to scrape the edge, and those that use a pair of ceramic rods to hone the edge. Better knives, like Henkels and Wusthof, do better with the ceramic rods. Some sharpeners, like those made by Wustof, employ both both schemes.

The ones with the rods shouldn't do anything different than a steel would. They shouldn't do any sharpening, just realign the edge but you can do that with a ceramic coffee mug. The ones with the carbide inserts will DESTROY a knife. They'll get it sharp sure but you're really hogging away metal with it and I've seen chef knives acquire a concave edge shape faster than you can imagine using carbide sharpeners. Here are a couple edges under magnification from Blade Forums. The first is a blade that had been sharpened with a carbide pull through, the second was stone ground with a Wicked Edge system. Hell of a difference.
 

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240sxguy

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I'm going to resurrect this. I have some very dull blades that have chipped edges and I'd like to clean them up a bit. i have the ceramic stick type of sharpener but I doubt this will be able to remove enough meat to get the massive chips out. Any suggestions?
 

slowtwitch73

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The Wustof pull through sharpeners that your press against the counter are hands down the cheapest and easiest to use and they give an edge that will shave your arm.

We stayed at a house and the knives were damn sharp, so I looked around to find what they used. When I got home I ordered one for 12$ and sure enough.

I have fiddled with many 'sharpening systems' /methods over the years and for a lay person, and for the money, I haven't found better.

So good, I plan to get one and cut down the handle down and throw it in my hunting pack and get rid of the diamond steel and stones I have carried.

Like exmaxima1 posted up there^^^^

 
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seber

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Can anyone explain why every time I try to sharpen my knife using steel I make it even blunter? I draw the blade down the steel at a 20-degree angle as most online searches have suggested. Is it because I'm left-handed?
Steels are not meant to sharpen a blade. They are used to realign the turned edge. To do that, you draw the edge backward on the steel. That is opposite the direction you would use for sharpening.
 

RTM

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What seber said: I start near the handle of the knife, and pull it back, ending at the tip of the knife. Simultaneously, I start near the handle of the steel, and move toward the tip. The knife handle is leading the travel, not the tip.

May not be correct, but was what I was taught 40 years ago.
 

MJK

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Steels are not meant to sharpen a blade. They are used to realign the turned edge. To do that, you draw the edge backward on the steel. That is opposite the direction you would use for sharpening.
Learn something new every day. I will give that a try.

For what its worth, some things in the thread I agree with - Japanese blades are way harder than German/American which I prefer. My most used is a Gyuto style one from Japanesechefsknife.com. I use the extra large DMT diamond stones freehand and for years got by only with the 'fine' grade. After 20 years, it is probably more 'extra fine now'. A little dawn, water, and a very shallow angle make short work of it. I clean up the edge lightly with a kitchen steel (apparently going the wrong way). When I need any pressure to slice, I resharpen. Probably every 3-6 months if I use a softer poly cutting board.
 
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