Guindesigns
Well-Known Member
I was thinking about adding some serrations to a few hunting knives I'm working on. Problem is I've never done them before. How would I go about learning this and would I use files or can I use my grinder. Help please.
really??? cool would you happen to know what this wheel is called?Most are done with abrasive wheels designed to create serrations.
I don't really like them myself. BUT... People don't understand there real use and want them on some blades. Not full length serrations but on like the back half.Off topic but why would you want serrations on a hunting blade? I don't like serrations on any blade but especially one I'll use for hunting.
Off topic but why would you want serrations on a hunting blade?
yepIn general you don't...... when someone asks for a hunting knife with serrations, it's a safe bet that they are not very knowledgeable, and just think it's "cool".
Ok I can see that.In the kitchen, and I’m talking pro chefs here, it is a widely held belief that bread knives and tomato knives should be serrated. The reason this is almost universally believed is because with bread you cut it by sawing to avoid crushing it or deforming it if it is very soft. On crusty breads it is sometimes difficult to get a non-serrated edge to bite.
On tomatoes it is also sometimes difficult to get a polished edge to bite. Also, acidic foods dull an edge quickly.
NONE of these make a serrated knife better. A well done edge will beat a serrated knife every time. But a serrated knife does make cutting breads and tomatoes easier, and for tomatoes you don’t have to continually wipe your blade on a wet towel to get the acids off that are eating the edge.
I talk everyone I can out of serrated knives, but serrated knives do have some utility. But in these cases I recommend the person go get a serrated slicer at Walmart. A serrated knife is intended to be a beater knife and there’s no reason to custom make one from a quality perspective. (read as: I’d much rather make you a fantastic chef knife where the cutting performance and edge retention is night and day versus making you a knife where you can’t tell the difference.)
It goes exactly to what John Doyle said: serrations are a crutch for those who don’t want to sharpen. But in real life sometimes a crutch is useful, non-perfection aside.
I like serrations on a blade when I am opening the chest up on a Deer in the field too cool it down faster.Off topic but why would you want serrations on a hunting blade? I don't like serrations on any blade but especially one I'll use for hunting.
500$ gor the wheel just seem extreeme.really??? cool would you happen to know what this wheel is called?
Yes, that's a lot of money. Until you divide that cost over 100 knives, at which point $5 a knife to save yourself 100 hours with no wrecked blades is really, really cheap.500$ gor the wheel just seem extreeme.