Mr Burrfection, I love your videos about this knives.. It make me more appreciative of this kitchen tool.. I am a avid fan for japanese knives.. I just couldnt afford them just yet.. Can you send me one of the damage that you have.. Thank you...! My answer to that question is that, the owner might have used to open a can..
I have only one knife I trust to not take damage in that specific instance. It's 3/16 thick Serbian chefs knife and a hardness of 60 with a high carbon steel. The rest of my knives, even my cheepos never see frozen meat or high density frozen vegetables. I don't even like using them on a bamboo cutting board. I've had edge rolls because of it.
@@Gyvulys I know you're trying to be edgy and get a few likes but want to explain something. I cook a lot, usually i cook dinners 6 nights per week, i volunteer cooking at various places that serve people in need, rescue missions, abuse shelters, food pantries, i bring my knife roll with me to aid with food prep because many of these places are under funded and things like knives and their sharpness get over looked. As a result i use my knives often, mostly my chef knife. So when my birthday came, my lovely wife wanted a gift that would last, be if very high quality and was comfortable for me to use in larger prep tasks. So she took me to a local knife store that specializes in mostly Japanese knives, i tried dozens of knives, from 7inch santoku's to 12 inch traditional chef knives. I settled on a 10inch chef knife that was very comfortable, all the sharp edges near the handle where rounded making it comfortable for long prep work, and a joy to use. This knife was several hundred dollars, sticker shock to many, including myself given that i was use to $30-50 carbon steel knives or ones from $150 knife block sets. I ended up looking at cheaper, but still high quality knives in the $150-200 range and while they where nice, they didn't match the finish of the knife i fell in love with. My wife was now convincing men to get the $300 dollar knife, because she knew that's the one i really enjoyed but was trying to compromise and save a few bucks. I later bought several more knives to help with other tasks, my 4 knives have cost around $1000. So while it may be funny to make a joke about marrying my knives, really my wife knows these are knives that make me happy, they make cooking an experience that's easier to do, less frustrating, I've also tried so many new things in the kitchen, i can truly mince garlic or shallots. These are knives that if treated right and taken care of, will last me decades, and it was a gift from my wife who saw the joy cooking for others gave me.
Yes, I would appreciate that. That's actually what I found this video looking for. I got a Togiharu chef's knife for xmas and I am fully aware that I need to treat it with care. I treat all my good knives with care, so I want to know anything that might be particularly important when dealing with Japanese steel.
Yeah, they should use those super soft steel knives to do that. You shouldn't buy a super hard steel knife to do "work horse" knife stuff like cleaving raw chicken in half. Use a German steel knife for that, much softer and less likely to chip.
A knife is a tool exactly for that - cutting various stuff. If a knife is so fragile, that it breaks because of this, then it's a horrible quality knife.
@Jack Blade Yes, but when it comes to knives, a good knife, while not designed for everything, will not break even if you put it under stress. These Japanese knives have a hard edge, yes... So what? That edge is incredibly brittle. It's ONLY good enough to "mince herbs"... It's a flawed tool, and gives no real advantages. You can sharpen any steel knife to that point. Paying hundreds of dolars for these flawed knives just shows peoples' lack of sense. Victims of advertisement.
@Jack Blade Examples - hunting knives, bowie knives. These knives can as easily pry your cans open, as they can nicely slice your tomatoes. And they won't break. THAT'S what I'd call a good knife. Your little japanese knife? It's only usable for very few tasks, and it's not even that extraordinary at them - you can sharpen ANY knife to that point.
Jack Blade can you really abuse a Bowie knife and then cut herbs with it? I think the edge would be too damaged or at least too dull to cut and slice properly.
@@brekkoh "Why you have to respect everything you ever buy or receive." Honestly with all the research and effort I'm just hopeless with whetstone sharpening. Bolster, no bolster; HRC 55 to HRC 62; $50 stone vs. $150 stone; angle guide or no angle guide, I'm a worthless knife sharpener. Gentle handling, good stropping both on steel and leather, and when it's time, a proper professional sees to it (hopefully another 2 years). I don't understand how someone can think that swinging a precision tool into a steel can or frozen bone is a good idea. I just can't even...
@@ericlapanik I have 2 (chef) knives: Miyabi Mizu and Victorinox Fibrox, both 8". The Victorinox is usually reserved for heavy veg. skinning work like butternut squash or kent pumpkins where I know having a lighter, more easily controlled blade is safer (took the tip of my index finger clean off with the Miyabi when I slipped on a squash), but the wider spine is also really nice for breaking down cabbages and dikon. I've sliced/diced/minced probably 2000 onions, 500 shallots, and 500 heads of garlic, and broken down probably 200 whole chickens on the Miyabi since I bought it and honestly couldn't be happier with how it's held up. When it eventually needs professional work beyond stropping, I know I have an "old reliable" behind it that I can keep "sharp enough" in an emergency.
I've never had a professional sharpen any of my knives, but after practicing for a few years, I can't imagine them getting my knives significantly sharper than I can. I would hope a pro could get it sharper, but not enough that I'd want them to do it instead of me.
My father had a large Swiss made butcher knife. After he passed I helped clean his home and i picked up this great knife. My mother in law saw it and asked if she could have it. What could I say? I said sure. The next time I saw it it had a 1/4” gouge in the middle of the cutting edge. 😡 I brought it home and painstakingly worked out 1/4 of material from the 13” blade without losing the temper. Took a long time. Got it shave ready again. Dad, it’s not leaving my home until I pass.
yeaaah. and than then they get mad for you saying wtf are you doing! I finally got our boss to get the knifes sharpened and two days after the new lady started slicing tomatoes on the inox table without a cutting board.
@@garethbaus5471 know what? Keep fingers away from blade, keep an eye on the blade, and never have anything that don't want cut in the projected motion of the blade? You're right, many people actually miss the last one. Me included in some unfortunate events.
@@lamxung5000 They're afraid that the slightest mistake would result in the deepest cut, which is understandable. But they forget that it is easier to make mistakes with duller knifes.
Hi, first of all, love your videos. I'm a knife maker but I mostly sharpen knives. As someone else said in the comments, most of the bigger Japanese brands end up looking like those knives you have on your table. A Shun or kai dropped from the counter will break, the tip gone or even down the middle, easyly. When I use my HRC-tester on the bigger brands, the same knife will have a hardness between 54 and 62 HRC, this for Kai, Shun, Miyabi,...etc. some you can bend 90 degrees and they stay like that, others are more brittle than glass. With carbon steel knives you have to choose between toughness or hardness or somewhere in between. However with stainless you can have both when the heat treat is done right (and the steel is right offcourse) so I find there is no excuse for those bigger brands when they release stainless knives that are more fragile then a hummingbird. Ps: you should make some knives, start to finish yourself, document the entire process of learning on video, would be good for your channel. 😁 keep it up.
Yea, it seems obvious to me. I've seen damage like this happen to a knife and it was simply because it was knocked off a counter and landed tip first full force.
ye a solid stone floor would probably be capable of that, or a fancy kitchen flooring. still pretty bad, haven’t dropped a knife yet. would have to be pretty stupid or careless to allow a knife to drop imho lmfao. don’t leave knifes I’m vulnerable positions waiting for you to make a mistake 🤠👍🏼
killer Greasy handle and a wet hand. I picked it up, it slipped out, hit the corner of a marble table and hit the floor point first. Piece stuck in the floor 1/2" deep and snapped the point off. Ruined a $500 knife. Its easy if you are in a hurry and using some Japanese knives. They are heavy and the handles are smooth. Did it once and never again. I drop cheap knives now. 😂
I live near the Kai knife factory (who make the Shun knives). They offer free sharpening for all of their knives. I would love to have any of these knives and take them to Kai to have them assessed and and (if possible) sharpened. I had tip damage on one of one of my Kershaw knives (also made by Kai) and they (after warning me) were able to grind it to have a sharp tip again.
I know how it can happen. I was taking my japanese knife to work since the ones at work ware quite dull and slow to work with, and after asking for it to be left aside and not taken by others it disappeared... When I found it after a hour it was already too late. Other story is that my executive had a japanese steal knife that no one else used it, and some of the dish wasers put it in the dishwasher machine and left it over night there. It wasn't a pretty atmosphere the next morning lol... That is why I never have taken any of my own knifes at work ever again.
I bought my first Enso Nakiri a couple of weeks ago. I've been admiring the sharpness and cutting receipts with it. I finally used it to cut something tonight. I was extremely careful washing it until I went and put it in the dish rack. I banged it against the faucet, and now it has a slight ding. Accidents happen and it hurts!!!
@@Gyvulys nah you should use a different tool for something like that. a shovel and a fork are both tools but digging a hole with a fork would be very inefficient
That chef knife with the tip broken off looks just like one a prep cook broke at a restaurant I work at. He founded it in between two Frozen pieces of pork and tried to pry them apart and the whole tip of that knife snapped off, let's just say he didn't have a job much longer since he was using the executive chefs knife! I'm glad to see you posted videos again after your short break. I would like to see a repair video where you fix that cleaver. That's the kind of stuff I would like to try to do with the stones that I have.
I have repaired 3 Shun knives. One was a garage sale knife with lots of little chips. Needed a new edge end to end. The other two were left hidden by a renter. Tips bent badly. All happy now and my wife’s favorites. Enjoyed doing it.
With the tip broken Shun, the best repair I've found is to grind the spine back down toward the edge. Wet cloth around the blade below where you're grinding to dissipate heat.
After I had someone at a local kitchen store sharpen one of my Shun knives, it came back looking like one of his examples. Learned the hard way to only send my knives back to Shun (or find an expert like this gent, or learn to do it right yourself). Shun does a great job servicing their products.
I can't believe how some people treat there knives. I have just repaired a knife that someone (apparently not the owner) has used to open a can 😕 After about an hour or so work by myself it's razor sharp again. Thanks I love your channel you have so much great content, hello from Australia👍
Harder steel is more prone to chip or snap. Many of the Nihonto I restored had Hagire, or Chips taken out of the Ha, or Boshi. It's just the nature of the Blade style, or differentially hardened Blades. I broke a small amount of tip off of my Nihonto just by touching a Oak Dowel which I used to hang Newspaper for Tameshigiri, the object is to perfectly cut the paper without a tear at full speed with Kesagiri. I caught the Dowel and had to repair the Boshi. In fact most of the Nihonto that had broken in battle and converted to Wakizashi were Swords that were Hitatsura. Which classically had Hardened steel throughout the blade. What did that? Someone used it to pry something or it simply fell to a Ceramic or similarly hard floor.
I damaged a knife tip worse than that by trying to cut butter! I had only frozen butter, was hungry and wanted to saute some onions for eggs immediately. Stuck the tip in the butter, right along the edge of the slab of butter and SNAP!! Off came a huge chunk of the knife tip. (It was a cheap, but not really thin bladed Walmart knife.) If you want a photo, happy to post it. I joke about my knife that was busted by butter. Love your channel.
I actually use a Fist Edge BK5050 elmax survival knife for cutting through stuff that requires more "force" than "finesse" but your philosophy is perfect for kitchen cutlery. I think a quality survival/bushcraft knife definitely has a place in the kitchen.
I had a friend who destroyed a couple of my expensive knives. The first one he used to split a large pumpkin, managed to get it halfway through the pumpkin and then tried to use it as a lever and broke the knife off at the handle. The second one he decided to use as an “axe” to chop down some bamboo in the garden (so basically used it like a machete), managed to make several 1 cm deep chips. Both knives were a complete write-off. The most amazing part of the story is that I was the one in the wrong as the knives were obviously defective - and he never replaced them. Also my friends/flatmates at the time sided with him (they felt I was unfair blaming him for the damage).
Long time since Ive shared housed but that would have had resulted in some verbal abuse along the lines of is your fucking brain as damaged as these knives? Who the fuck is stupid enough to think a kitchen knife should be used outside of the kitchen?
You do hold most of the blame. They are your knives. It is your job to make sure that everyone who has access to them knows what they are and either not to touch them or how and when to use them. Does that mean your "friend" should get off scott free? Hell no! He should be on the line for at least the cost of a good consumer grade knife, ~$150.00 U.S.
ZurlHammerdoom I actually kept the knives in my room and told everyone that they were for my use only as they were fragile. He went into my room and got one of the knives to split the pumpkin as there were no other large knives in the house. Obviously I told him NEVER to use the second knife EVER at this point. Then about two months later he went into my room again and took the other knife to chop bamboo (which by then I had hidden away - I guess I should have locked it away). He had been told very clearly not to use the knives. But he was unfortunately just one of those alpha type males than nows better than anyone else... On both occasions I was out of the house - so I had no way to stop him. This was about 40 years ago - so custom made knives were not so expensive then, I hate to think what they would cost these days...
FYI he is still a good friend - and to this day believes he did nothing wrong with the knives (friendship has other benefits). So no big deal really...
Had a friend who had left their expensive knife in the sink and accidentally dropped a cast iron skillet on the blade and broke the tip off of it. It looked almost like the one you showed.
Hi Ryky, For my dents I usually use a nylon hammer, then, to take out the large chips and dings I will use my 1x30 sander to reprofile, Then I will finish with my Japanese stones and strop depending in the quality of the knife, Thanks for all your time and videos, they are appreciated.
Such a shame to see these blades so damaged. One of my very favorite single side blades was found in a thrift store with a chip in the cutting edge. Its a long one too, longer than the other blades I later purchased that had been the personal blades of a professional Sushi chef. That damaged blade was the blade that invited me to radically up my knowledge and skill set, becoming proficient in reshaping and properly profiling and dressing higher end blades. It saddens the heart of one who appreciates the art and craft of blade making to see these damages, but it was one such damage that I found that raised my own skill level to a far higher level. It is one thing to maintain a yanagi, and quite another to reshape the entire length of the blade and maintain the proportions of each curve and plane and line. That broken tip? It looks just like a German blade I re profiled for a friend. He was trying to separate 2 pieces of meat that had been frozen together and only partly thawed.. using his 10" Woostoff chef knife as a pry bar. PING!!!! When I was done he had a nicely shaped 8" blade.. Again, to shape it correctly, a huge amount of material needed to be removed to fair the curves and thickness. At least he admitted how it was snapped. these are not alloyed tempered to be pry bars😊
About the missing tips: my guess is that people try to open things up with them...Drop them etc. And either chip it right away, or try to straighten it out and break it. Also, a lot of people tend to put their knifes in the dish washer... On sanitize mode etc.... Doing that and using a 8$ knife sharpener, can easily do that on the blade.
Dropped on porcelain tile likely. Porcelain is typically harder than concrete and ceramic floors. I have highend porcelain floors on which I have dropped everthing from knives(yuck) to hammers on my floor , never scratches or dents the floor but destroys whatever gets dropped. When they were building my house the tile layers burned through two saws before the realized they had to go get special blades to cut the flooring I bought that was rated at a strength more than 4x that of most ceramic tile they typically worked with.
When you work 14/16h a day with it, accidents happen. I broke my Shibata Kotetsu big time (way worse that any of this video), running like a chicken in the middle of service. Shits happens
That's the exact reason I never brought any of my knives to the job except for preparing roasts and turkeys etc. I always used beaters and kept them very sharp for service.
Oh Man i Got the exact Knife. i Love it! met the maker when he came to my local shop years ago. i brought it to my work and broke the very tip was so devastated but got them to buff it out for me and looks good as almost new haha. ( could never get it as sharp as when i got it.) he (The maker) truly is the master of sharpening.
I think the biggest problem is people don't know what or which knives are used for what task... Knives are proprietary and you shouldn't use a slicing knife for chopping or a cleaver for making thin precision slices in veggies. Some knives might have a dual purpose and might do them fairly well but for specific tasks use the proper knife. Also, they are not familiar with the hardness or type of steel and how to properly care for them. For example, some people will place their knives in the dishwasher and wonder why it gets dull and damage. when they should have properly hand washed it! Love your videos, knowledge, and professionalism!
I would guess to pry “something” (metal) open, that is shut tight. I just did this (with a cheap Ol’ Hickory-old in my tool box) to pry a stopper in my sink. I needed something very slim/sharp to do it. Bottom line, a touch of laziness.
When I got married I told my wife "this is where I put the things that are not screwdrivers" cuz I swear to you... if one day I saw damage to the blade from twisting out a screw or prying a thing or a missing tip for any reason I was going to lose my mind.
So glad I stumbled upon your channel. I appreciate your knowledge and honest feedback. Seeing all these damaged knives reminds me of the beautiful set of Whustoff knives I bought my parents. The chef knife ended up with a broken handle, chips all over the edge, and hammer marks on the spine where they were hitting it to smash through bones...I rescued the knives but the poor chef's knife was ruined 😔
Oh yea this is why I have a Bowie (that can take any amount of abuse) in my kitchen for cutting stuff that may be abusive for kitchen knives :) and Victorinox for opening cans - using can opener part for that that is for over 9 years now. I get it why those in video may break unless using them the right way and only cutting stuff that they are intended for :)
This reminds me of when I visited a local Williams-Sonoma and watched an employee tutor customers on using their brand-new knives. I saw that many of them bought Shun VG-10 knives - I just hoped they were warned about the fragile steel.
I a lover of my knives have dropped one and took the tip off, forget how i dropped it. The tip is still in my real wood floor LOL that'll be a treat to find when re-finishing. Still use it with the broken tip, slowly it'll get absorbed by the sharpening so not worried about it since its not a sharp break
One way you can break a tip off of knife like the one at 6:16 is if you store the knife in draw unsheathed, the tip gets works its way under the drawer's back side edge and then you pick it up quickly to use it with out realizing it. Almost happened to me with a low end knife that I did not have room for in block. Lucky it it did not break.
But in my laptop when my trackpad is having a seizure and I have to take off the keyboard to unplug it from my laptop, screwdrivers are too far and I can easily poke at the keyboard tabs
Answer to 9:32 | They possibly used it to pry open something. My mother never ceases to amaze me when I check the condition of her knives. Knife spines all f'd up and knife edges all dented in ways that I do not understand. That is why I stopped sharpening her knives.
I've seen a knife break almost exactly like that tipless one. A cook had a towel on top of his knife and when he grabbed the towel the knife fell. I was passing behind him and accidentally kicked the knife right as it went tip first into the floor drain. That busted the tip clean off and I tore my cook a new one for almost stabbing a knife into my foot because he didn't know how to take care of knives or safety.
A lot of the damage could happen during shipment. I ordered a 10” wustof ikon from cutleryandmore. It arrived completely bent with the tip exposed from the packaging.... bent like a skateboard. I returned and ordered from amazon the knife also arrived with the razor tip also sticking out of the packaging. I’m glad the mail carrier wasn’t seriously hurt.
I was pressing on a small Victorinox knife once and it snapped shooting most of the blade off like a spring. Very lucky it didn't hit me in the face. I learned my lesson - knives can be brittle, don't try to flex them too much !
Jordan, Yes, “stuff” happens, I have seen many knife points broken, but have never seen one like that one either. I think the cost of the high end knives from Japan lead people to give them mythical samurai sword strength, and they do live up to that standard, but have limits, right. That was an impressive break ! L
U kept saying ppl abuse their knives but I’m their defensive I don’t think they meant to bang it up. I read lots of reviews on shun and tip break/chipping is very common. Off topic but what would u recommend for cutting tough meats like pork belly w the bone? Cutting the bones.
I owned kasumi when i was working as a chef, they may be more brittle, the blade rusts, and take longer to sharpen. But they get the sharpest for the longest. These overly elaborate Damascus knives are more of an artform then anything else.
@@unrulian Most kitchen knives are made of an alloy which is reasonably flexible when hardened to 56-58 Rockwell. Even carbon steel displays this property when tempered properly. What I'm describing is the "spring" in the steel - the ability to deflect and return to it's original position. Japanese knives are typically hardened to 60-62 Rockwell, and high end knives that use powdered steel alloys can be hardened as far as 64-67 Rockwell. This creates a sharper, longer lasting edge, but it creates a more brittle blade. So knives that are hardened to 60+ Rockwell will work very well for their intended purpose, but significantly less well for any purpose which involves putting pressure on the side of the blade.
I know exactly how that stuff happens. It's hard to keep my knives safe from family. I have been maintaining some inexpensive ones and they just leave them on the granite counter top, bury them in the sink (dangerous), cut on glass plates, and whatever else. As long as I keep those knives in ok shape they almost never touch my nice knives (almost never).
JAY LEE: In order to not change the edge profile, I'd use a file to bring the spine down to the edge. If you rounded it, you'd have more of a French shape and if you angled it you could have a kiritsuke. Either way, that would be a lot of work on a stone alone.
I'm a amateur/hobby knife sharpener and repair, i would love to try my hand at fixing one of these knifes, thinking of joining your patreon just to try.
That last knife looks like it was used as a pry bar. Garbage disposal would have probabley caused very severe and obvious scratching, and dropping it on its tip even on concrete probably wouldn't have taken off that much. When I heat treat some of my own knives I now try throwing them tip down onto concrete to test for flaws, if it bends over visibly it is to soft if it chips it was either grain growth or hidden flaws I have been surprised by how many survive.
This is why I made 2 ranges of japanese style knives, the clumsy range and the traditional range. The trads are brittle differential quenched. But the clumsy range are made from German CS95 spring steel, so they have the sought after single japanese sided bevel and shape, but it cans urvive being dropped on the floor, only down side is the edge needs sharpening every 2 weeks or so, as its not as hard, but its tough as nails.
Regarding the tip off the knife question, "how do you do that?" Thats easy, I currently live in Jamaica and I can tell you that i have a drawer full of knives with the tips off. Why, because "we" open cans with the tip of the sharpest object in the drawer. I hope that helps. I am waiting to see how you fix that one with your stones. Thanks for all that you do.
i live in Panama... the cleaning lady used my 10" chef knife to try to pry open the steel plug in the sink. ( one that is opened mechanically with a lever )
I brought my ceramic knife in the office... one day the tip was missing similar like that... when I asked around what happened, someone told me they tried to pry something off... *sigh* prying with ceramic.
Dishwashers can cause chips in the blades like most of these have. All it takes is a helpful friend that doesn't know better putting it in the dishwasher after a get together and you'll get all sorts of chips.
@@mrsir1872 High heat, Collisions, Dishwasher detergent is an abrasive. If it doesn't chip your knife it'll take the edge away. But you could have easily just googled it. If you're curious take your learning into your own hands.
Never saw One and i haven't even seen the video. But searching and tinkering.. i remember to have been seeing some automatic Rolling sandpaper (Sorry for the english) in some bladesmith video that maybe could serve the cause. (It was an Anger knives bladesmith video, for example)
😭. I bought a nice Henkel Pro for my girlfriend and within 2 months of use she brutalized the knife. I chose that knife because I suspected she doesn't handle her tools well. She's coming from Brazil and bringing the knife with her so I can sharpen it! Ricky your channel is great and I have learned from and appreciated all of your presentations. Keep them coming! ♥️
8 years ago I put a small 1 or 2mm chip out of my Global knife trying to break open a coconut, before I learned you’re supposed to use the 90 degree edge near the handle... Anyhow, although it doesn’t look that great, it has no negative effect on actual chopping ever! I just keep sharpening it with a whetstone and eventually it will disappear, but it’s still fine as is.
One thing you often forget is that the Knife Metal itself could have been defective - and it was not as abused as you assume. Small differences in the mix of metals can sometimes do that.
I'm betting 50% of these blade injuries are just from accidentally knocking them off countertops. I'm sure that's what happened to the Shun with the tip gone.
As a line cook I see knives with the tips busted off all the time because guys use them to prise pans out of the line and also use it a screw driver / box cutter. They also dip them in the fryers.
My Nana used it to pry open a painted in window. Or my dad used it to to tar roof leaks. There is a reason why my kitchen knives and my painting pallet knives are now locked.
There aren’t many one piece fanboys even tho it’s popular not many people talk bout it i treasure that anime I’ve been watching it since 2012 I was 1st grade
I don't own a single expensive knife, max price £30, but I've never damaged one of them nearly as much as I'm seeing here. How they broke the tips is beyond me.
My Mother wanted to borrow my gyuto for a few days to cut some meat in preparation for a celebration. After she was done, my Dad, without my mother's or my knowledge, used my it to cut tree branches in my yard. He ended up made my gyuto chipped in a number of places. And he never admitted it until this day that he used it to trim trees.
Just bought a NOS Sakai Mitsuo 165mm Nakiri kitchen knife. Also bought a Mont Blanc knife honing guide from Japan. That being said, what are the two different blade angles of the edge? I cannot read Kanji and I see how the honing guide holds the knife at only one angle. Have 1K and 10K Naniwa stones, plus a 4k/8K Norton for razor honing, along with Japanese Nagura and Chosera stones, so any advice is greatly appreciated!-Johnchan in Texas
Had a shun premier for about 4 years now has been extensively used no cracks chips anything at all it gets looked after and isn't used for dumb shit. they aren't the best knives that's for sure my miyabi is much better but at the same time I don't think you can judge a knife based on user error if you buy something nice take care of it I guess
I work for Cutco (which I know people are gonna give me shit for) and I've been to hundreds of customers homes. I simply don't understand the things people do to their kitchen knives One person snapped their chef knife bc they tried to use it as a pry bar TO LIFT THEIR STOVE!
Okay, the entry lines of Zwilling and Wusthof are meant for that kind of industrial use. You do that sort of thing to the pro lineups, you've got a screw loose.
Each time you drop it, instead of placing it, you run the risk of causing microfractures in this brittle steel. Microfractures grow to become fractures and you have a knife missing a chip soon after. Would like to see these fractures under a microscope, esp. the large broken tip.
Rob Oliver lot of people think because it’s a Japanese knife it’s indestructible. They watch movies and think folded Japanese steel is all that. As you said harder steel will be sharper and hold an edge the trade off is brittleness. People need to understand what the knife can and can’t do.
@@calvinwebb7989 There's a few reasons. 1. Japanese knives are usually harder, 2. damascus is a terrible kitchen knife material, and 3. shun knives are overpriced mall-ninja knives and are particularly prone to chipping, cracking and breaking entirely. Notice there was pretty much only Shun damascus knives on that table? No globals, No tojiro, No yoshihiro. There was one mac but it just had a chipped tip from being dropped. That would happen to any knife.
I have to sharpen my mother's knives every time I go to visit, and could never figure out how in the world they get SO dull in a relatively short period of time. One weekend, I go to visit, walk in the door, and she is literally hacking away at a piece of 2x4 on the kitchen counter - with her chef knife - like she's trying to chop down a tree in the forest. On another occasion, I tried giving her a ceramic knife to use for vegetables, which she wouldn't have to sharpen, but she immediately proceeded to try to hack through chicken bones with it. Some people simply don't differentiate between knife/cleaver/axe/hammer. It's all the same to them.
Can you recommend any decent electric or manual sharpener that's easy to use for Japanese Shun knives (8" Classic Chef, Classica Santoku, Classic 6inch paring)? I take very good care of mine, so there aren't any chips in the blade, but I just don't have the patience to learn how to use a whetstone. I have heard about the Chef Choice Electric sharpener and some other manual sharpeners like the Brod & Taylor and other similar style sharpeners. My need is just normal maintenance sharpening because I hate having to send my knives to the mfg. as it sometimes takes a month or so turn around time. I just want something that's easy to use and something I can use on a regular basis to keep the edge, etc. What recommondations do you have? Thank you..
So if I bought a knife from Shun off Amazon, it's gonna be chipped and cracked when I receive it OR are these knives in the video pre-owned and damaged by their owners?
Could some of the edge dents be from magnetic strip knife holders ? A miscalculated approach could subject the edge to a bruising sideways metallic impact (magnetic strip is steel ).
I am a little bit of a blacksmith and know enough about it to never, ever, buy a 'Damascus" (actually just pattern welded) knife. I also know how to sharpen and how to use and treat my knives. I have bought Japanese knives. Very cheap carbon steel ones. They are the best I have. I have a cleaver that cost me $10 from Japan. Yes, I had to regrind/resharpen it when I recieved it but that was expected. The steel is good and holds a great edge. People that buy this "damascus" because it's pretty need to just put those on display and get cheap knives to actually use. And no, NO ONE is allowed to touch my knives other than a close friend that I trust with them
my trusted knife store bur.re
Mr Burrfection, I love your videos about this knives.. It make me more appreciative of this kitchen tool.. I am a avid fan for japanese knives.. I just couldnt afford them just yet.. Can you send me one of the damage that you have.. Thank you...! My answer to that question is that, the owner might have used to open a can..
My wife hammered a small thin Chinese style slicer through a frozen chicken. I was able to repair the damage, still have the knife, not the wife.
John Scarborough the life of the wife is ended by the knife.
(We maybe the marriage anyways)
hammering through your wifes bones is harder than chicken btw. lol
@@bH-eo5tz That sounds like, "Until death do you part"...
I have only one knife I trust to not take damage in that specific instance. It's 3/16 thick Serbian chefs knife and a hardness of 60 with a high carbon steel. The rest of my knives, even my cheepos never see frozen meat or high density frozen vegetables. I don't even like using them on a bamboo cutting board. I've had edge rolls because of it.
Love this, man
This is why no one touches my knives but me.
Marry your knife then, if you love it so. Weirdo.
@@Gyvulys I know you're trying to be edgy and get a few likes but want to explain something. I cook a lot, usually i cook dinners 6 nights per week, i volunteer cooking at various places that serve people in need, rescue missions, abuse shelters, food pantries, i bring my knife roll with me to aid with food prep because many of these places are under funded and things like knives and their sharpness get over looked. As a result i use my knives often, mostly my chef knife. So when my birthday came, my lovely wife wanted a gift that would last, be if very high quality and was comfortable for me to use in larger prep tasks. So she took me to a local knife store that specializes in mostly Japanese knives, i tried dozens of knives, from 7inch santoku's to 12 inch traditional chef knives. I settled on a 10inch chef knife that was very comfortable, all the sharp edges near the handle where rounded making it comfortable for long prep work, and a joy to use. This knife was several hundred dollars, sticker shock to many, including myself given that i was use to $30-50 carbon steel knives or ones from $150 knife block sets. I ended up looking at cheaper, but still high quality knives in the $150-200 range and while they where nice, they didn't match the finish of the knife i fell in love with. My wife was now convincing men to get the $300 dollar knife, because she knew that's the one i really enjoyed but was trying to compromise and save a few bucks. I later bought several more knives to help with other tasks, my 4 knives have cost around $1000. So while it may be funny to make a joke about marrying my knives, really my wife knows these are knives that make me happy, they make cooking an experience that's easier to do, less frustrating, I've also tried so many new things in the kitchen, i can truly mince garlic or shallots. These are knives that if treated right and taken care of, will last me decades, and it was a gift from my wife who saw the joy cooking for others gave me.
no one takes care of them as oneself
Big facts
Word up
In light of this maybe you should do a how to use and when to use a Japanese knife.
Believe me, it's a mystery, but some people are untrainable.
Yes, I would appreciate that. That's actually what I found this video looking for. I got a Togiharu chef's knife for xmas and I am fully aware that I need to treat it with care. I treat all my good knives with care, so I want to know anything that might be particularly important when dealing with Japanese steel.
Put them in a display case and use a knife that's not going to chip when an onion looks at it the wrong way
Yes agree!! I would love it if Burrfection could do a video like that!! 👍👍😄
Better yet, tell people what NOT to do with knifes (and please don't use new knifes)
Too many of those, "It cuts tin cans and garden hoses too!" commercials...
Yeah, they should use those super soft steel knives to do that. You shouldn't buy a super hard steel knife to do "work horse" knife stuff like cleaving raw chicken in half. Use a German steel knife for that, much softer and less likely to chip.
A knife is a tool exactly for that - cutting various stuff. If a knife is so fragile, that it breaks because of this, then it's a horrible quality knife.
@Jack Blade
Yes, but when it comes to knives, a good knife, while not designed for everything, will not break even if you put it under stress. These Japanese knives have a hard edge, yes... So what? That edge is incredibly brittle. It's ONLY good enough to "mince herbs"... It's a flawed tool, and gives no real advantages. You can sharpen any steel knife to that point. Paying hundreds of dolars for these flawed knives just shows peoples' lack of sense. Victims of advertisement.
@Jack Blade
Examples - hunting knives, bowie knives. These knives can as easily pry your cans open, as they can nicely slice your tomatoes. And they won't break. THAT'S what I'd call a good knife.
Your little japanese knife? It's only usable for very few tasks, and it's not even that extraordinary at them - you can sharpen ANY knife to that point.
Jack Blade can you really abuse a Bowie knife and then cut herbs with it? I think the edge would be too damaged or at least too dull to cut and slice properly.
"Why you should never buy a Japanese knife without experience"
"Why you should never own a piece of equipment of any kind without researching how to care for it"
@@brekkoh "Why you have to respect everything you ever buy or receive."
Honestly with all the research and effort I'm just hopeless with whetstone sharpening. Bolster, no bolster; HRC 55 to HRC 62; $50 stone vs. $150 stone; angle guide or no angle guide, I'm a worthless knife sharpener. Gentle handling, good stropping both on steel and leather, and when it's time, a proper professional sees to it (hopefully another 2 years).
I don't understand how someone can think that swinging a precision tool into a steel can or frozen bone is a good idea. I just can't even...
Patrick Proctor i personaly just ship my only knife to a professional wetstone sharpener every years
@@ericlapanik I have 2 (chef) knives: Miyabi Mizu and Victorinox Fibrox, both 8". The Victorinox is usually reserved for heavy veg. skinning work like butternut squash or kent pumpkins where I know having a lighter, more easily controlled blade is safer (took the tip of my index finger clean off with the Miyabi when I slipped on a squash), but the wider spine is also really nice for breaking down cabbages and dikon. I've sliced/diced/minced probably 2000 onions, 500 shallots, and 500 heads of garlic, and broken down probably 200 whole chickens on the Miyabi since I bought it and honestly couldn't be happier with how it's held up.
When it eventually needs professional work beyond stropping, I know I have an "old reliable" behind it that I can keep "sharp enough" in an emergency.
I've never had a professional sharpen any of my knives, but after practicing for a few years, I can't imagine them getting my knives significantly sharper than I can. I would hope a pro could get it sharper, but not enough that I'd want them to do it instead of me.
My father had a large Swiss made butcher knife. After he passed I helped clean his home and i picked up this great knife. My mother in law saw it and asked if she could have it. What could I say? I said sure. The next time I saw it it had a 1/4” gouge in the middle of the cutting edge. 😡
I brought it home and painstakingly worked out 1/4 of material from the 13” blade without losing the temper. Took a long time. Got it shave ready again. Dad, it’s not leaving my home until I pass.
I hate using dull knives so I sharpened the knives at work. The next day I watched a co worker use one to pry a lid off.....
Dude same here. People don't care
@Gray Au they'll find it. They always do. And they'll fuck that knife up worse than the others
That's why I always use my own knives and they always stay with me wherever I go.
Replace "co-worker" with "manager" and you've got my experience. 🤷♂️🤣😢
yeaaah. and than then they get mad for you saying wtf are you doing! I finally got our boss to get the knifes sharpened and two days after the new lady started slicing tomatoes on the inox table without a cutting board.
Just bought a $50 Japanese damascus knife. It is so sharp, my wife is scared to use it, which is a good thing.
A dull knife is far more dangerous than a sharp one. You just have to treat it with respect, and it will treat fine.
@@altersami9660 and the people who are scared of sharp knives, probably don't know enough to safely use a knife.
@@garethbaus5471 know what? Keep fingers away from blade, keep an eye on the blade, and never have anything that don't want cut in the projected motion of the blade?
You're right, many people actually miss the last one. Me included in some unfortunate events.
What the hell is even with people who are scared of sharp bladed objects.
"oh no that knife is working the way it should, i'm so scared to use it"
@@lamxung5000 They're afraid that the slightest mistake would result in the deepest cut, which is understandable. But they forget that it is easier to make mistakes with duller knifes.
Hi, first of all, love your videos.
I'm a knife maker but I mostly sharpen knives. As someone else said in the comments, most of the bigger Japanese brands end up looking like those knives you have on your table. A Shun or kai dropped from the counter will break, the tip gone or even down the middle, easyly. When I use my HRC-tester on the bigger brands, the same knife will have a hardness between 54 and 62 HRC, this for Kai, Shun, Miyabi,...etc. some you can bend 90 degrees and they stay like that, others are more brittle than glass. With carbon steel knives you have to choose between toughness or hardness or somewhere in between. However with stainless you can have both when the heat treat is done right (and the steel is right offcourse) so I find there is no excuse for those bigger brands when they release stainless knives that are more fragile then a hummingbird. Ps: you should make some knives, start to finish yourself, document the entire process of learning on video, would be good for your channel. 😁 keep it up.
"I don't see how you can damage a knife this badly."
Drop it on the floor.
Yea, it seems obvious to me. I've seen damage like this happen to a knife and it was simply because it was knocked off a counter and landed tip first full force.
Throw it with massive force into the sink.
ye a solid stone floor would probably be capable of that, or a fancy kitchen flooring. still pretty bad, haven’t dropped a knife yet. would have to be pretty stupid or careless to allow a knife to drop imho lmfao. don’t leave knifes I’m vulnerable positions waiting for you to make a mistake 🤠👍🏼
killer Greasy handle and a wet hand. I picked it up, it slipped out, hit the corner of a marble table and hit the floor point first. Piece stuck in the floor 1/2" deep and snapped the point off. Ruined a $500 knife. Its easy if you are in a hurry and using some Japanese knives. They are heavy and the handles are smooth.
Did it once and never again. I drop cheap knives now. 😂
lol any normal knife made of 420 would give zero shits about being dropped
As a knife lover, this video was painful to watch.
I live near the Kai knife factory (who make the Shun knives). They offer free sharpening for all of their knives. I would love to have any of these knives and take them to Kai to have them assessed and and (if possible) sharpened. I had tip damage on one of one of my Kershaw knives (also made by Kai) and they (after warning me) were able to grind it to have a sharp tip again.
5:50
When you use a Shun as a hammer :p
and the next one is when you use a Shun as a crowbar..
yeah. probably
I know how it can happen. I was taking my japanese knife to work since the ones at work ware quite dull and slow to work with, and after asking for it to be left aside and not taken by others it disappeared... When I found it after a hour it was already too late.
Other story is that my executive had a japanese steal knife that no one else used it, and some of the dish wasers put it in the dishwasher machine and left it over night there. It wasn't a pretty atmosphere the next morning lol...
That is why I never have taken any of my own knifes at work ever again.
This is exactly why I have knives that only I use, and cheaper knives for anyone else who may want to cook.
I bought my first Enso Nakiri a couple of weeks ago. I've been admiring the sharpness and cutting receipts with it. I finally used it to cut something tonight. I was extremely careful washing it until I went and put it in the dish rack. I banged it against the faucet, and now it has a slight ding. Accidents happen and it hurts!!!
I’ve broken a knife tip like that, trying to lever frozen food apart. I was young and foolish
Yeah, some sort of prying attempt like that would've been my guess as well.
I reshaped a Wuustof for a friend that did just that... frozen food pry bars, knifes are not.
Knife is a mere tool. It should be used for whatever you need it for. If it can't be used that way, it's a shit knife.
@@Gyvulys nah you should use a different tool for something like that. a shovel and a fork are both tools but digging a hole with a fork would be very inefficient
@@mellowcorpsep6665
The comparison with shovels and forks doesn't fit here, because I am talking about knives and knives alone.
That chef knife with the tip broken off looks just like one a prep cook broke at a restaurant I work at. He founded it in between two Frozen pieces of pork and tried to pry them apart and the whole tip of that knife snapped off, let's just say he didn't have a job much longer since he was using the executive chefs knife! I'm glad to see you posted videos again after your short break. I would like to see a repair video where you fix that cleaver. That's the kind of stuff I would like to try to do with the stones that I have.
I have a expert on this. Let me ask my wife 🤣🤣
Dude! My wife abuses knives and when they don't cut she asks why they suck. Like really? Haha
The only knives my wife hasn't broken are what I forge
You better not let her see this posting
@@Burrfection 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I know
@Luc she does.
I have repaired 3 Shun knives. One was a garage sale knife with lots of little chips. Needed a new edge end to end. The other two were left hidden by a renter. Tips bent badly. All happy now and my wife’s favorites. Enjoyed doing it.
With the tip broken Shun, the best repair I've found is to grind the spine back down toward the edge.
Wet cloth around the blade below where you're grinding to dissipate heat.
I concur. Bench grinder will do the job... Slighly shorter knife but it will be unique.
After I had someone at a local kitchen store sharpen one of my Shun knives, it came back looking like one of his examples. Learned the hard way to only send my knives back to Shun (or find an expert like this gent, or learn to do it right yourself). Shun does a great job servicing their products.
This is EXACTLY why you do NOT let anyone else borrow or use your tools- tool abuse.
I will let anyone use my F. Dick knives. They can handle the abuse np. My two MAC's on the other hand. Hell no!
I can't believe how some people treat there knives. I have just repaired a knife that someone (apparently not the owner) has used to open a can 😕 After about an hour or so work by myself it's razor sharp again.
Thanks I love your channel you have so much great content, hello from Australia👍
Harder steel is more prone to chip or snap. Many of the Nihonto I restored had Hagire, or Chips taken out of the Ha, or Boshi. It's just the nature of the Blade style, or differentially hardened Blades. I broke a small amount of tip off of my Nihonto just by touching a Oak Dowel which I used to hang Newspaper for Tameshigiri, the object is to perfectly cut the paper without a tear at full speed with Kesagiri. I caught the Dowel and had to repair the Boshi. In fact most of the Nihonto that had broken in battle and converted to Wakizashi were Swords that were Hitatsura. Which classically had Hardened steel throughout the blade. What did that? Someone used it to pry something or it simply fell to a Ceramic or similarly hard floor.
I damaged a knife tip worse than that by trying to cut butter! I had only frozen butter, was hungry and wanted to saute some onions for eggs immediately. Stuck the tip in the butter, right along the edge of the slab of butter and SNAP!! Off came a huge chunk of the knife tip. (It was a cheap, but not really thin bladed Walmart knife.) If you want a photo, happy to post it. I joke about my knife that was busted by butter. Love your channel.
A good rule of thumb is that if you can't bite through it, the knife doesnt touch it.
I actually use a Fist Edge BK5050 elmax survival knife for cutting through stuff that requires more "force" than "finesse" but your philosophy is perfect for kitchen cutlery. I think a quality survival/bushcraft knife definitely has a place in the kitchen.
I had a friend who destroyed a couple of my expensive knives. The first one he used to split a large pumpkin, managed to get it halfway through the pumpkin and then tried to use it as a lever and broke the knife off at the handle. The second one he decided to use as an “axe” to chop down some bamboo in the garden (so basically used it like a machete), managed to make several 1 cm deep chips. Both knives were a complete write-off.
The most amazing part of the story is that I was the one in the wrong as the knives were obviously defective - and he never replaced them. Also my friends/flatmates at the time sided with him (they felt I was unfair blaming him for the damage).
Long time since Ive shared housed but that would have had resulted in some verbal abuse along the lines of is your fucking brain as damaged as these knives? Who the fuck is stupid enough to think a kitchen knife should be used outside of the kitchen?
You do hold most of the blame. They are your knives. It is your job to make sure that everyone who has access to them knows what they are and either not to touch them or how and when to use them.
Does that mean your "friend" should get off scott free? Hell no! He should be on the line for at least the cost of a good consumer grade knife, ~$150.00 U.S.
ZurlHammerdoom I actually kept the knives in my room and told everyone that they were for my use only as they were fragile. He went into my room and got one of the knives to split the pumpkin as there were no other large knives in the house. Obviously I told him NEVER to use the second knife EVER at this point. Then about two months later he went into my room again and took the other knife to chop bamboo (which by then I had hidden away - I guess I should have locked it away). He had been told very clearly not to use the knives. But he was unfortunately just one of those alpha type males than nows better than anyone else...
On both occasions I was out of the house - so I had no way to stop him. This was about 40 years ago - so custom made knives were not so expensive then, I hate to think what they would cost these days...
FYI he is still a good friend - and to this day believes he did nothing wrong with the knives (friendship has other benefits). So no big deal really...
Had a friend who had left their expensive knife in the sink and accidentally dropped a cast iron skillet on the blade and broke the tip off of it. It looked almost like the one you showed.
Hi Ryky, For my dents I usually use a nylon hammer, then, to take out the large chips and dings I will use my 1x30 sander to reprofile, Then I will finish with my Japanese stones and strop depending in the quality of the knife, Thanks for all your time and videos, they are appreciated.
Such a shame to see these blades so damaged. One of my very favorite single side blades was found in a thrift store with a chip in the cutting edge. Its a long one too, longer than the other blades I later purchased that had been the personal blades of a professional Sushi chef. That damaged blade was the blade that invited me to radically up my knowledge and skill set, becoming proficient in reshaping and properly profiling and dressing higher end blades. It saddens the heart of one who appreciates the art and craft of blade making to see these damages, but it was one such damage that I found that raised my own skill level to a far higher level. It is one thing to maintain a yanagi, and quite another to reshape the entire length of the blade and maintain the proportions of each curve and plane and line. That broken tip? It looks just like a German blade I re profiled for a friend. He was trying to separate 2 pieces of meat that had been frozen together and only partly thawed.. using his 10" Woostoff chef knife as a pry bar. PING!!!! When I was done he had a nicely shaped 8" blade.. Again, to shape it correctly, a huge amount of material needed to be removed to fair the curves and thickness. At least he admitted how it was snapped. these are not alloyed tempered to be pry bars😊
About the missing tips: my guess is that people try to open things up with them...Drop them etc. And either chip it right away, or try to straighten it out and break it. Also, a lot of people tend to put their knifes in the dish washer... On sanitize mode etc.... Doing that and using a 8$ knife sharpener, can easily do that on the blade.
You know you are rich when you use your $300 knife to open a can of soup
I bet they said it just happened. Not sure how. And got a refund.
Dropped on porcelain tile likely. Porcelain is typically harder than concrete and ceramic floors. I have highend porcelain floors on which I have dropped everthing from knives(yuck) to hammers on my floor , never scratches or dents the floor but destroys whatever gets dropped. When they were building my house the tile layers burned through two saws before the realized they had to go get special blades to cut the flooring I bought that was rated at a strength more than 4x that of most ceramic tile they typically worked with.
When you work 14/16h a day with it, accidents happen. I broke my Shibata Kotetsu big time (way worse that any of this video), running like a chicken in the middle of service. Shits happens
That's the exact reason I never brought any of my knives to the job except for preparing roasts and turkeys etc. I always used beaters and kept them very sharp for service.
Oh Man i Got the exact Knife. i Love it! met the maker when he came to my local shop years ago. i brought it to my work and broke the very tip was so devastated but got them to buff it out for me and looks good as almost new haha. ( could never get it as sharp as when i got it.) he (The maker) truly is the master of sharpening.
F
I think the biggest problem is people don't know what or which knives are used for what task... Knives are proprietary and you shouldn't use a slicing knife for chopping or a cleaver for making thin precision slices in veggies. Some knives might have a dual purpose and might do them fairly well but for specific tasks use the proper knife. Also, they are not familiar with the hardness or type of steel and how to properly care for them. For example, some people will place their knives in the dishwasher and wonder why it gets dull and damage. when they should have properly hand washed it! Love your videos, knowledge, and professionalism!
I would guess to pry “something” (metal) open, that is shut tight. I just did this (with a cheap Ol’ Hickory-old in my tool box) to pry a stopper in my sink. I needed something very slim/sharp to do it. Bottom line, a touch of laziness.
When I got married I told my wife "this is where I put the things that are not screwdrivers" cuz I swear to you... if one day I saw damage to the blade from twisting out a screw or prying a thing or a missing tip for any reason I was going to lose my mind.
So glad I stumbled upon your channel. I appreciate your knowledge and honest feedback. Seeing all these damaged knives reminds me of the beautiful set of Whustoff knives I bought my parents. The chef knife ended up with a broken handle, chips all over the edge, and hammer marks on the spine where they were hitting it to smash through bones...I rescued the knives but the poor chef's knife was ruined 😔
Oh yea this is why I have a Bowie (that can take any amount of abuse) in my kitchen for cutting stuff that may be abusive for kitchen knives :) and Victorinox for opening cans - using can opener part for that that is for over 9 years now. I get it why those in video may break unless using them the right way and only cutting stuff that they are intended for :)
This reminds me of when I visited a local Williams-Sonoma and watched an employee tutor customers on using their brand-new knives. I saw that many of them bought Shun VG-10 knives - I just hoped they were warned about the fragile steel.
Really love how honest this title is. I don't know why but for some reason it just feels like a breath of fresh air
Looks like someone used that knife to try and pry something open.
yeah a car door with a break that size lol
I a lover of my knives have dropped one and took the tip off, forget how i dropped it. The tip is still in my real wood floor LOL that'll be a treat to find when re-finishing. Still use it with the broken tip, slowly it'll get absorbed by the sharpening so not worried about it since its not a sharp break
Me looking at the thumbnail: “cool is that some new style cleaver?”
Voice over: “It wasn’t”
One way you can break a tip off of knife like the one at 6:16 is if you store the knife in draw unsheathed, the tip gets works its way under the drawer's back side edge and then you pick it up quickly to use it with out realizing it. Almost happened to me with a low end knife that I did not have room for in block. Lucky it it did not break.
I cringe when I see people using knives as screwdrivers and prybars. That's the whole reason they made screwdrivers and prybars.
SBeckerDTD those people need multitools
Same, thankfully you can easily do most of this using it as a knife should be able to be used
But in my laptop when my trackpad is having a seizure and I have to take off the keyboard to unplug it from my laptop, screwdrivers are too far and I can easily poke at the keyboard tabs
Screwdrivers are NOT pry bars
@@nategrey8383 I didn't say they were, but also using a slotted screwdriver as one is a lot better option than a knife.
Answer to 9:32 | They possibly used it to pry open something. My mother never ceases to amaze me when I check the condition of her knives. Knife spines all f'd up and knife edges all dented in ways that I do not understand. That is why I stopped sharpening her knives.
I've seen a knife break almost exactly like that tipless one. A cook had a towel on top of his knife and when he grabbed the towel the knife fell. I was passing behind him and accidentally kicked the knife right as it went tip first into the floor drain. That busted the tip clean off and I tore my cook a new one for almost stabbing a knife into my foot because he didn't know how to take care of knives or safety.
A lot of the damage could happen during shipment. I ordered a 10” wustof ikon from cutleryandmore. It arrived completely bent with the tip exposed from the packaging.... bent like a skateboard. I returned and ordered from amazon the knife also arrived with the razor tip also sticking out of the packaging. I’m glad the mail carrier wasn’t seriously hurt.
... Wüsthof* ...
I imagine someone wedged it into frozen goods and attempted to apply leverage to separate the materials only to find they broke the knife off 🤦🏻♂️
I was pressing on a small Victorinox knife once and it snapped shooting most of the blade off like a spring. Very lucky it didn't hit me in the face. I learned my lesson - knives can be brittle, don't try to flex them too much !
Jordan,
Yes, “stuff” happens, I have seen many knife points broken, but have never seen one like that one either. I think the cost of the high end knives from Japan lead people to give them mythical samurai sword strength, and they do live up to that standard, but have limits, right. That was an impressive break ! L
U kept saying ppl abuse their knives but I’m their defensive I don’t think they meant to bang it up. I read lots of reviews on shun and tip break/chipping is very common. Off topic but what would u recommend for cutting tough meats like pork belly w the bone? Cutting the bones.
I owned kasumi when i was working as a chef, they may be more brittle, the blade rusts, and take longer to sharpen. But they get the sharpest for the longest. These overly elaborate Damascus knives are more of an artform then anything else.
... more of an artform than* anything ...
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Thanks for taking the time out of your day.
My ex-wife broke off the tip of one of my best knives by using it as a screwdriver while I was out of town. Did I mention that we are divorced?
I've had a few Shuns that looked like that, are they brittle or is it just me?
Using them not for their intended purpose.
I get it but I still see more Shuns than any other with chipping
@@unrulian Most kitchen knives are made of an alloy which is reasonably flexible when hardened to 56-58 Rockwell. Even carbon steel displays this property when tempered properly. What I'm describing is the "spring" in the steel - the ability to deflect and return to it's original position.
Japanese knives are typically hardened to 60-62 Rockwell, and high end knives that use powdered steel alloys can be hardened as far as 64-67 Rockwell.
This creates a sharper, longer lasting edge, but it creates a more brittle blade.
So knives that are hardened to 60+ Rockwell will work very well for their intended purpose, but significantly less well for any purpose which involves putting pressure on the side of the blade.
I know exactly how that stuff happens. It's hard to keep my knives safe from family. I have been maintaining some inexpensive ones and they just leave them on the granite counter top, bury them in the sink (dangerous), cut on glass plates, and whatever else. As long as I keep those knives in ok shape they almost never touch my nice knives (almost never).
I would like to see how you are gonna fix that knife missing 2 inches of the tip on a wet stone?
JAY LEE: In order to not change the edge profile, I'd use a file to bring the spine down to the edge. If you rounded it, you'd have more of a French shape and if you angled it you could have a kiritsuke. Either way, that would be a lot of work on a stone alone.
Say it's a fat belly nakiri and call it a day.
6:18 when you pulled that knife out I literally burst out laughing
I'm a amateur/hobby knife sharpener and repair, i would love to try my hand at fixing one of these knifes, thinking of joining your patreon just to try.
That last knife looks like it was used as a pry bar. Garbage disposal would have probabley caused very severe and obvious scratching, and dropping it on its tip even on concrete probably wouldn't have taken off that much.
When I heat treat some of my own knives I now try throwing them tip down onto concrete to test for flaws, if it bends over visibly it is to soft if it chips it was either grain growth or hidden flaws I have been surprised by how many survive.
Looks like most of the Shun knives that I've seen.
shun are thin... I hear they have a lifetime replacement for breaks like this..
This is why I made 2 ranges of japanese style knives, the clumsy range and the traditional range. The trads are brittle differential quenched. But the clumsy range are made from German CS95 spring steel, so they have the sought after single japanese sided bevel and shape, but it cans urvive being dropped on the floor, only down side is the edge needs sharpening every 2 weeks or so, as its not as hard, but its tough as nails.
Regarding the tip off the knife question, "how do you do that?" Thats easy, I currently live in Jamaica and I can tell you that i have a drawer full of knives with the tips off. Why, because "we" open cans with the tip of the sharpest object in the drawer. I hope that helps. I am waiting to see how you fix that one with your stones. Thanks for all that you do.
i live in Panama... the cleaning lady used my 10" chef knife to try to pry open the steel plug in the sink. ( one that is opened mechanically with a lever )
I brought my ceramic knife in the office... one day the tip was missing similar like that... when I asked around what happened, someone told me they tried to pry something off... *sigh* prying with ceramic.
Thats just plain stupid
Why can't you just use a can opener! omg.
Leave tip on fire, then apply pressure to cold surface. Tension and temperature differentials could cause it to shatter.
How? Just how are these people doing this to these knifes. Not through any normal kitchen use I can think of.
Dishwashers can cause chips in the blades like most of these have. All it takes is a helpful friend that doesn't know better putting it in the dishwasher after a get together and you'll get all sorts of chips.
@@TheRightish Sadness
@@TheRightish how does a dishwasher do that?
@@mrsir1872
High heat,
Collisions,
Dishwasher detergent is an abrasive.
If it doesn't chip your knife it'll take the edge away. But you could have easily just googled it. If you're curious take your learning into your own hands.
... knives* ...
I would like to know for those with bad arthritis or in my case the start of rheumatoid arthritis, how we would sharpen our own knifes.
if i am right This Channel has a video on automatic sharpener
@@dittagecoeco2738 about why NOT to use them. My culinary instructor would take away my knife set if he ever found out I used a electric sharpener.
Never saw One and i haven't even seen the video. But searching and tinkering.. i remember to have been seeing some automatic Rolling sandpaper (Sorry for the english) in some bladesmith video that maybe could serve the cause. (It was an Anger knives bladesmith video, for example)
Does that cleaver belong to a triad member? Chips like that usually happen when sharp blades clash lol
Wrong country
@@landlocked_lifts332 it's sent by mail and triads are present in Japan
@@landlocked_lifts332 lol and the cartel isn't only in Mexico either FYI
I'm after some new knives for my kitchen and I'd like your opinion on what is good or worth buyin in my price range
😭. I bought a nice Henkel Pro for my girlfriend and within 2 months of use she brutalized the knife. I chose that knife because I suspected she doesn't handle her tools well. She's coming from Brazil and bringing the knife with her so I can sharpen it! Ricky your channel is great and I have learned from and appreciated all of your presentations. Keep them coming! ♥️
8 years ago I put a small 1 or 2mm chip out of my Global knife trying to break open a coconut, before I learned you’re supposed to use the 90 degree edge near the handle... Anyhow, although it doesn’t look that great, it has no negative effect on actual chopping ever! I just keep sharpening it with a whetstone and eventually it will disappear, but it’s still fine as is.
Using the knife as a pry tool is the only thing I can think of.
Cleaver style...ive seen it before...
One thing you often forget is that the Knife Metal itself could have been defective - and it was not as abused as you assume. Small differences in the mix of metals can sometimes do that.
I'm betting 50% of these blade injuries are just from accidentally knocking them off countertops. I'm sure that's what happened to the Shun with the tip gone.
As a line cook I see knives with the tips busted off all the time because guys use them to prise pans out of the line and also use it a screw driver / box cutter. They also dip them in the fryers.
My Nana used it to pry open a painted in window. Or my dad used it to to tar roof leaks. There is a reason why my kitchen knives and my painting pallet knives are now locked.
ouch
they didn't have strong haki when knife dueling
SMH bruh these people have to learn armament asap
There aren’t many one piece fanboys even tho it’s popular not many people talk bout it i treasure that anime I’ve been watching it since 2012 I was 1st grade
I have a set of Kai Shun Ken Onion kitchen knives - are they considered good quality knives ? (I like them and had no problems.)
I don't own a single expensive knife, max price £30, but I've never damaged one of them nearly as much as I'm seeing here. How they broke the tips is beyond me.
Probably dropped
My Mother wanted to borrow my gyuto for a few days to cut some meat in preparation for a celebration. After she was done, my Dad, without my mother's or my knowledge, used my it to cut tree branches in my yard. He ended up made my gyuto chipped in a number of places. And he never admitted it until this day that he used it to trim trees.
haha. love it
Didn’t you hear about the knife fight at the International Chef’s Convention? Somebody mis-understood
Just bought a NOS Sakai Mitsuo 165mm Nakiri kitchen knife. Also bought a Mont Blanc knife honing guide from Japan. That being said, what are the two different blade angles of the edge? I cannot read Kanji and I see how the honing guide holds the knife at only one angle. Have 1K and 10K Naniwa stones, plus a 4k/8K Norton for razor honing, along with Japanese Nagura and Chosera stones, so any advice is greatly appreciated!-Johnchan in Texas
They were prying with that knife.
Was there a followup to the these repairs? Any before and after video reels?
I like how these are almost entirely Shuns
cuz theyre bad
that was the implication
Or because their more popular and more inexperienced people buy them?
Had a shun premier for about 4 years now has been extensively used no cracks chips anything at all it gets looked after and isn't used for dumb shit. they aren't the best knives that's for sure my miyabi is much better but at the same time I don't think you can judge a knife based on user error if you buy something nice take care of it I guess
the harder the steel, the more brittle it is
I work for Cutco (which I know people are gonna give me shit for) and I've been to hundreds of customers homes. I simply don't understand the things people do to their kitchen knives One person snapped their chef knife bc they tried to use it as a pry bar TO LIFT THEIR STOVE!
no hate here. welcome and thanks for sharing
Tried to open a can with the knife, knew an ex-coworker whom did that with his Wusthof.
Okay, the entry lines of Zwilling and Wusthof are meant for that kind of industrial use. You do that sort of thing to the pro lineups, you've got a screw loose.
Bought a Masamoto carbon steel utility knife at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo about 10 years ago. Hands down the best blade i ever owned.
Click bait headline. The steel is harder on a Japanese knife making it more brittle. Look after it and it will look after you.
Each time you drop it, instead of placing it, you run the risk of causing microfractures in this brittle steel. Microfractures grow to become fractures and you have a knife missing a chip soon after. Would like to see these fractures under a microscope, esp. the large broken tip.
Rob Oliver lot of people think because it’s a Japanese knife it’s indestructible. They watch movies and think folded Japanese steel is all that. As you said harder steel will be sharper and hold an edge the trade off is brittleness. People need to understand what the knife can and can’t do.
@@calvinwebb7989 There's a few reasons. 1. Japanese knives are usually harder, 2. damascus is a terrible kitchen knife material, and 3. shun knives are overpriced mall-ninja knives and are particularly prone to chipping, cracking and breaking entirely. Notice there was pretty much only Shun damascus knives on that table? No globals, No tojiro, No yoshihiro. There was one mac but it just had a chipped tip from being dropped. That would happen to any knife.
I have to sharpen my mother's knives every time I go to visit, and could never figure out how in the world they get SO dull in a relatively short period of time. One weekend, I go to visit, walk in the door, and she is literally hacking away at a piece of 2x4 on the kitchen counter - with her chef knife - like she's trying to chop down a tree in the forest. On another occasion, I tried giving her a ceramic knife to use for vegetables, which she wouldn't have to sharpen, but she immediately proceeded to try to hack through chicken bones with it. Some people simply don't differentiate between knife/cleaver/axe/hammer. It's all the same to them.
I had a roommate years ago that was in school to become a chef and I used to watch him stab into cans and use his knives as an opener...
Can you recommend any decent electric or manual sharpener that's easy to use for Japanese Shun knives (8" Classic Chef, Classica Santoku, Classic 6inch paring)? I take very good care of mine, so there aren't any chips in the blade, but I just don't have the patience to learn how to use a whetstone. I have heard about the Chef Choice Electric sharpener and some other manual sharpeners like the Brod & Taylor and other similar style sharpeners.
My need is just normal maintenance sharpening because I hate having to send my knives to the mfg. as it sometimes takes a month or so turn around time. I just want something that's easy to use and something I can use on a regular basis to keep the edge, etc.
What recommondations do you have?
Thank you..
What I confirmed here is Shun knives are prone to chipping and tips breaking off.
Tony Mai as any knife that is poorly handled
@DG DG i have shun knives... have yet to break a tip, but i have seen countless shun knives with this problem.
So if I bought a knife from Shun off Amazon, it's gonna be chipped and cracked when I receive it OR are these knives in the video pre-owned and damaged by their owners?
... the latter.
6:20 makes me laugh so long
That knife had became nakiri lol
Could some of the edge dents be from magnetic strip knife holders ? A miscalculated approach could subject the edge to a bruising sideways metallic impact (magnetic strip is steel ).
Are these people preparing nails for dinner or something?
Gotta get that iron in the diet
@@stevenswenson7041 hahahaha
I am a little bit of a blacksmith and know enough about it to never, ever, buy a 'Damascus" (actually just pattern welded) knife. I also know how to sharpen and how to use and treat my knives. I have bought Japanese knives. Very cheap carbon steel ones. They are the best I have. I have a cleaver that cost me $10 from Japan. Yes, I had to regrind/resharpen it when I recieved it but that was expected. The steel is good and holds a great edge. People that buy this "damascus" because it's pretty need to just put those on display and get cheap knives to actually use. And no, NO ONE is allowed to touch my knives other than a close friend that I trust with them
I think he was trying to change his car tyre.... Who knows how you kill a knife like that???