I don't know what was said during any of that.
I'm not sure what that 'test' proves and how it relates to knives. In my lowly opinion, it's a terrible test of anything knife related. Do you plan on sticking your knife in a vise and hitting it with a hammer? I'm not trying to be a jerk. We know nothing of what happened there...unless you speak the language.
Ultra high hardness seems to be, at least to some minor degree, at odds with toughness. And edge geometry plays a HUGE role in all things knife related.
For those of us without high tech analysis equipment or even Rc testers, the best thing we can do is pick a suitable knife steel that we can get the best heat treat out of with our equipment, decide what it is that we want that blade to achieve, choose a tempering temperature within the proper range to best suit the intended use, and tailor the edge geometry to suit the intended use. Then, spend an hour or two around the shop cutting things that the knife was designed to do and see how it lives up to your expectations. That's the best test you can do.
People forget that knives cut and slice things. That's it. They really make lousy choppers, prybars and screwdrivers in the grand scheme of things. And if they do happen to chop, pry or hammer things well, they probably are really lousy at slicing things.
Putting a coupon of steel (of unknown alloy and heat treat regimen) in an Rc tester (do we know if it's accurate even?) for one reading and then putting it in a vise and banging on it with a hammer is pretty worthless to me. It tells us nothing of how well a knife blade will perform.
Bluntly speaking.

No offense to you at all, Scott.