While scanning over the new topics I was pleased to see this question being addressed, for years the number of knives I have seen with mismatched steel choices tells me that in is not widely understood, or even discussed much. There are many factors involved in which steel will make the best knife, chopper vs. fine cutter. Carbon level alone is just one of them. Below .80% carbon will alleviate extra carbide concerns in overall toughness but will also result in a natural tendency towards a tougher martensite morphology. Overall obtainable hardness is not as large of an issue as these other concerns since those numbers peak at around .77-.80%. With very tight control one can choose how much carbon to put into solution and thus make a higher carbon steel behave more like a tougher steel. Alloying has the most profound effects on these considerations, and can give choppers much higher strength or slicers much greater edge holding, but puts very precise manipulation of carbon solutions out of reach of most folks with basic heat sources.
But in this specific question the ability to really notice these differences is the real question. To see major differences in performance, based on the factors I touched on above, you really need to have the temperature controls to unlock these features. With just a gas or coal forge as your heat source, most of these factors will not be as noticeable, and the alloys that can really differ will not respond well without tighter controls. In other words, I don’t suspect you would notice much of the .09% carbon difference between 1075 and 1084 without tighter heat treating controls, and while you may see a bit between 1075 and 1095 you could also run into some problems achieving it.