Knives with grooves in them?

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Jun 1, 2009
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O.K. so I have been looking for my next knife and I am leaning towards the Kershaw Groove and I was wondering; what is the deal with knives with grooves cut in the blade. Not a bohi (blood groove if you want to call it that)but the crazy grooves like the Kersh Groove or one of the Busse knives I saw. (can't think of the name) I know that they are probably just for looks and serve no usefull purpouse but do they have any drawbacks?? Do grooves like that weaken the blade strength or have any other adverse affect? I know that cleaning them might be harder but is there any thing I should know before I venture in to the grooved blade arena?
 
Quote from RJ from a previous Groove thread.

RJ Martin said:
I get a lot of questions from people who are concerned about what will happen to the grooves of the knife as it is resharpened. The answer is "ABSOLUTELY NOTHING!".
You can sharpen the blade until there is pretty much nothing left of it, and the only thing that you will see is that the edge bevel will become a bit wider. This is because the edge will become thicker as more and more of the blade is removed from repeated sharpenings. This is the same thing that would happen to any flat ground blade. It will still get sharp, and it will still cut like crazy.

The grooves will always disappear as they meet the edge, just the way they do when the knife is new. So, no need to worry! Sharpen away and enjoy the unique look of the blade!

As to cutting performance, the same general principles apply to the striated or grooved blade as to any regular knife-the cutting performance is directly related to edge sharpness and edge thickness. The standard groove, being flat "ground" will have a slightly thicker (and more robust!) edge than a hollow ground knife.

In cutting soft materials that don't bind when cut, you won't see any difference between a grooved blade and a blade without grooves.

In cutting harder materials like rubber hose, plastic tubing, etc., the grooves actually improve cutting performance because they cut the friction by about 80%. This is because the material being cut is only rubbing on the tops of the ridges!

When I received my first batch of Grooves from Kershaw, I immediately passed them out to my friends with the instructions "Beat the he** out of them". One went to an Electrician, one to a telephone company lineman, one to a powerplant maintenance supervisor, and one to an FBI agent. All of them have been impressed with the edge holding of the steel and the durability of the edge.
One report involved opening cardboard boxes for 2 weeks, at which time the knife was handed to an employee who had a farm. He opened 59 burlap seed bags, shaved wood, and performed other farm related chores. This guy also built houses for hurricane victims. He cut sheetrock for an entire weekend, which was a good verification that the grooves don't impede cutting performance. After all this, my friend restored the knife to shaving sharpness in less than 3 minutes (measured time!) using a ceramic rod sharpener. I'd say that ranks as exceptional performance from a factory knife!

Please keep those questions coming-I'll be here to answer them for you!

BTW, the new, striated Tanto Groove from Kershaw will feature a hollow "ground" blade. This knife promises to really push cutting performance to new levels!

Stay Sharp,

RJ Martin
Groove Designer
 
WOW! Thanks Thomas that pretty much sealed the deal. You should be promoted to Adamantium Member for an answer like that.
 
We've been playing around with Adamantium for some time, and are really hoping the material works out for a future project. Though it is quite expensive as you can imagine. :)
 
We've been playing around with Adamantium for some time, and are really hoping the material works out for a future project. Though it is quite expensive as you can imagine. :)

:eek:, next you will be talking about RAMIIIs :D

(Please do)
 
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