Hi everyone. I’m having a nightmare trying to sharpen a knife and would like some advice.
My girlfriend very kindly bought me a Teruyasu Fujiwara knife for Christmas. The knife is a Maboroshi no Meito Petty (150mm). It’s made of shirogami #1 carbon steel (white steel #1), forged between layers of stainless steel, Hrc 64-65.
You can see more about the knife here:
http://www.epicureanedge.com/shopexd.asp?id=87906
And here’s a photo:

So today I sat down to give it a sharpen. It was fairly sharp when it arrived, straight out the box, but I was sure I could get a keener edge on it, especially since the steel is 64-65 RC.
I started with the 400 grit diamonds and because I have the low angle adapter I decided to try 10 degrees per side (20 degrees inclusive). It seemed to take forever to get any burr but I was expecting that because the steel is so tough. However even when I finally started to get some burr it was only at the ends of the blade. So there was some burr near the tip and some burr near the heel but no burr at all in the middle part.
So I kept going and the burr at the ends seemed to grow a bit but the middle still had an area with no real burr. But i’d been going so long with the 400 grit stones I thought I must surely have reached the apex. so I went up to 600 grit and then my normal progression >> 800 >> 1000 >> 1200 ceramic >> 1600 ceramic >> Balsa strops.
All the way along I kept feeling the edge with my fingertips and it didn’t seem to be getting any smoother. Even the parts where I did raise a burr (at the tip and heel) still felt very coarse… They felt like they were around the 400 grit mark, certainly not 1k.
So I finished up anyway, removed it from the clamp and tried the fingernail catch test, which is my normal first test. The ends (heel and tip) caught ok but the middle did slide a bit, not a great result.
Arm hair shaving and cutting newspaper were the same - the middle was awful and the ends were a bit better but still not very good.
Now I was disappointed so I put the knife to one side and sharpened my Gyuto instead (Akifusa, 240mm) which is also 64 RC but this is PM steel instead of carbon steel. I did this at 10 degrees per side too (again 20 inclusive) and it sharpened up lovely, edge was great all along and felt smooth on the fingertips, passed all my normal sharpness tests. This cheered me up a bit… But not for long.
Feeling like I was ready for the challenge again I went back to the Teruyasu Fujiwara knife. Now I decided to go even lower on the angle at 8 degrees per side. I knew that reprofiling like that on a 65 RC knife would take a bit of effort to remove the metal so I decided to start with the 200 grit.
Went at it, again was taking ages to raise a burr… I dropped down to the 100 grit stones and after ages (again) had the same as before - the ends were getting a burr but the middle wasn’t.
At this point I noticed a chip in the edge near the heel. I pulled out the loupe and the edge looked like it was chipping in a few places so I stopped with the 100 stones immediately.
I went back up starting with 200, using the lightest pressure I possibly could, then 400 >> 600 >> 800 >> 1000, all using light pressure.
I kept feeling the edge with my fingertips and once again it was the same story - it felt pretty coarse, like it was a 400 grit finish no matter how far through the progression I was. I assume now this is probably down to chipping.
After 1000 I dropped the angle down to 12 degrees per side (24 inclusive) and then did some more light passes with the 1000 grit stones, then I backed off the angle a tiny bit more (maybe 0.5 degree per side) and did a few passes with the 1200 ceramics, then backed off the angle one last time (again 0.5 degree per side) and finished with a few light passes of the 1600 ceramics.
Then I removed the knife, obviously it didn’t pass any tests, but I don’t want to do any more today as I’ve probably done quite enough damage already.
So I’m pretty disappointed… Obviously I’ve been stupid by causing the chipping, that’s my fault for using coarse stones at low angles. I’m disappointed in myself but also a bit disappointed with the knife at the moment. My second attempt (8 degrees, 100 grit start) was stupid but my first attempt (10 degrees, 400 grit start) was within the range I really thought this knife would be able to handle.
So any advice appreciated. What do I need to do to bring this carbon steel (back) to life? How can I save this knife? The Akifusa is such a breeze to sharpen compared to the Fujiwara.
I’m a bit sad today, this is the first real problem I’ve had using the WE… I guess it had to happen sometime.