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Paul in NZ
8th May 2012, 11:56
Now I love my wife but I'm the first to admit she has some annoying habits. Not keeping the kitchen knives sharp as she uses them is one of them. Considering shes an ex chef this is a terrible crime. I hate using a dull knife - it really does my head in..

If I can be arsed I dress them regularly with a good stone and we have a little pull through sharpener BUT it seems to just gaul the edge these days. Problem being Vickster never uses that either,,, grrr....

So I was thinking electric sharpener. Any one have a recommendation on an affordable electric jobbie?

unstuck
8th May 2012, 11:57
Get a good quality steel, and learn how to use it properly.:msn-wink:

bogan
8th May 2012, 11:59
Get a good quality steel, and learn how to use it properly.:msn-wink:

And get a rocking chair for the porch, so you can sit there sharpening it while looking menacingly at those damn neighborhood hooligans!

merv
8th May 2012, 12:01
Paul mate, we went this way http://www.twintowerstrading.com/forever-sharp-series-knives-p-98.html and have no complaints - never sharpen anything and had them probably about 3 years now. Cheap as and no work involved.

HenryDorsetCase
8th May 2012, 12:02
Now I love my wife but I'm the first to admit she has some annoying habits. Not keeping the kitchen knives sharp as she uses them is one of them. Considering shes an ex chef this is a terrible crime. I hate using a dull knife - it really does my head in..

If I can be arsed I dress them regularly with a good stone and we have a little pull through sharpener BUT it seems to just gaul the edge these days. Problem being Vickster never uses that either,,, grrr....

So I was thinking electric sharpener. Any one have a recommendation on an affordable electric jobbie?

dont do it. the angles arent adjustable and will be too steep: all you'll do is fuck your good knives.

I bought one of these: its excellent.

http://www.edgeproinc.com/Apex-Model-Edge-Pro-System-c3/

I bought just the basic one and its veen very good. I also bought a diamond fine steel which is good for dressing between sharpening. Expnsive, sure but I expect to only buy one in my lifetime.

a decent knife is a couple hundred bucks so it makes sense to look after them

Paul in NZ
8th May 2012, 12:11
Get a good quality steel, and learn how to use it properly.:msn-wink:

Hard to use a steel on a short vege knife - we have a good one but....

Paul in NZ
8th May 2012, 12:13
Paul mate, we went this way http://www.twintowerstrading.com/forever-sharp-series-knives-p-98.html and have no complaints - never sharpen anything and had them probably about 3 years now. Cheap as and no work involved.

Hmm - worth a crack. Thanks Merv

slofox
8th May 2012, 12:15
And get a rocking chair for the porch, so you can sit there sharpening it while looking menacingly at those damn neighborhood hooligans!

And when your knives are sharp enough, you can clean the guns...:stoogie:

merv
8th May 2012, 12:17
Hmm - worth a crack. Thanks Merv

Got them off Trade Me so probably still some on there. They look a bit flimsy with plastic handles but we haven't been able to fault them. Go in the dishwasher every day. Good for cutting meat, bread etc, but not heavy like a butcher's knife.

Blackbird
8th May 2012, 12:29
I'm with the other guys and just use a good quality steel for all but one of our knives. The odd one out is a genuine Damascus steel carving knife which we had made a few years back. The blade is super-hard and I run it down the edge of a fine grit grinding slab. I occasionally use the slab to bring the edge up on other kitchen knives after steeling them for a few months.

carbonhed
8th May 2012, 12:32
Recently whilst surfing under the influence I added this to basket because it was on special...

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00075M29A/ref=oh_details_o00_s00_i00

On waking the next morning i realised it would probably be 120v... but decided "nah they'll send me the right one". They didn't so I had to buy a step down transformer too. :facepalm:

On the plus side this doodad is terrifyingly efficient. With very little practice you can work up a scalpel like blade that will shave the hairs on your arm no problemo... should you be into that kind of thing. Of course if you make a mistake with that kind of edge it gets very bloody very fast DAMHIK.

george formby
8th May 2012, 12:35
I use a "soft" ie smooth stone on my knives & a relatively smooth steel to maintain them. All the electrickery sharpeners I have seen take off too much metal & fook the blades. I have high end Japanese & German knives so I want them to last a life time.
Just stick to a good stone & give them a regular tickle.

Swoop
8th May 2012, 13:33
The better half is a chef/cook for a living.

She has worked in a few places and the sharpener of choice that she has seen and used at work, is this one here:
263369

I have a diamond shapener and have been doing the sharpening previously, but this is bloody fantastic!
Cheap(ish) and you can find them at your fishing shop. FCO stocks them if you have them down your way.

sil3nt
8th May 2012, 13:40
What you need is this

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FntD3KgIaY

The Lone Rider
8th May 2012, 16:43
Now I love my wife but I'm the first to admit she has some annoying habits. Not keeping the kitchen knives sharp as she uses them is one of them. Considering shes an ex chef this is a terrible crime. I hate using a dull knife - it really does my head in..

If I can be arsed I dress them regularly with a good stone and we have a little pull through sharpener BUT it seems to just gaul the edge these days. Problem being Vickster never uses that either,,, grrr....

So I was thinking electric sharpener. Any one have a recommendation on an affordable electric jobbie?

While this isn't quite an answer to your question...

My understanding is that the highest quality knives dont need sharpening unless you do stuff like trying to cut a brick with one.

I've got a Mundail knife, and it has never needed sharpening. Mum has several, and has had them for 15 years+ and they haven't been sharpened either. Even if I sharpen my other knives, the Mundail still ends up cutting better.

And I'm pretty sure the butchery they were bought from have a policy that if it goes blunt they will replace it free.

5150
8th May 2012, 16:56
I bought a wooden cutting board once. What a useless piece of shit. Could not cut anything with it. Blunt as fuck...... Took it back to where I got it from only to discover to my amazement that you cut things on it, not with it. False advertising me thought. Duuh :facepalm:

The Singing Chef
8th May 2012, 16:58
What you need is this


Reminds me of South Park, the voice just made the whole video for me haha.

In regards to sharpening the knives, I would never touch one of those hand-held things, from what I have seen they are shit. A stone and steel should be more than sufficient to keep them sharp as long as you are doing it correctly. Especially with a Diamond steel :eek:.

Spend your money on the bike instead!

FJRider
8th May 2012, 17:04
Now I love my wife but I'm the first to admit she has some annoying habits. Not keeping the kitchen knives sharp as she uses them is one of them. Considering shes an ex chef this is a terrible crime. I hate using a dull knife - it really does my head in..

If I can be arsed I dress them regularly with a good stone and we have a little pull through sharpener BUT it seems to just gaul the edge these days. Problem being Vickster never uses that either,,, grrr....

So I was thinking electric sharpener. Any one have a recommendation on an affordable electric jobbie?

Given the emotional instability of women ... giving them sharp knives might be considered dangerous :facepalm:

If YOU require sharp knives ... get some for your own use. And keep them locked away ... safely (for YOUR safety :innocent: )

The Singing Chef
8th May 2012, 17:16
Given the emotional instability of womem ... giving them sharp knives might be considered dangerous :facepalm:

If YOU require sharp knives ... get some for your own use. And keep them locked away ... safely (for YOUR safety :innocent: )

Ha reminds me of someone. Definitely +10 this idea! :laugh:

speights_bud
8th May 2012, 17:35
I Use Victorinox Knives at work, the small 3inch blade one i carry in my pocket cuts Aluminum shim and a whole bunch of other stuff on a regular basis (I'm a toolmaker) so it does go blunt over a week or so, i use polishing stones to bring it back to effing sharp again, only takes a minute, start with 400, then 600 and sometimes finish with a 1200stone.

As for the Ceramic style knives, we use the same ceramic stuff of scrapers in the plastics dept the same except with a square edge instead of sharp. they are awesome at holding their edge but drop it or knock it against something hard like a ceramic or steel bench top and they break pretty easily

Flip
8th May 2012, 18:38
You can't sharpen a crap knife. I love my svord brand steel knives. Yep they can rust. I can cut up 2 deer without them needing a sharpen. They hold an edge at least 400% better than any stainless steel knife I have ever owned.
My pocket knife is an expensive Buck folder but its only a quarter the knife the svord is.

Buy a fine oil stone and a good butchers steel.

Usarka
8th May 2012, 19:43
I use Furi Diamond Fingers and am happy enough with result.

I'm by no stretch a pro, but i cut ripe tomatoes with ease.

http://www.amazon.com/Furi-FUR626-Ozitech-Diamond-Sharpener/dp/B000F8SIOW

CookMySock
8th May 2012, 20:02
So I was thinking electric sharpener.No, don't. Google some docs on proper levelling, bevelling, and micro-bevelling your own knives, and buy yourself a nice stone and do it properly.