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As far as Work Sharp is concerned I can't say enough good about the company or it's products, and it's customer service and customer support team is the best in the business, no, I don't work for or rep for Work Sharp Corp, I'm just a knife owner and user who is greatly appreciative of the products and support that the company offers, it's made ...
The Lansky/Gato do work. A bigger jig then Chinese knock offs or make your own. Sacrilege to encourage Chinese knock offs but the very high ticket prices demanded by some is out of most people's league; just too big an investment. If you absolutely must have a powered machine then the larger Ken Onion Work Sharp is probably OK.
I just received my Work Sharp Knife and tool Sharpener after a week of research and countless youtube videos. I have always used a Lansky system on my small folders, leathermans etc, a KME on my Larger thicker blades, and a Smiths tri-hone on my Scandis, all with great success. I decided I...
I have a lot of knives of different grinds. They are all as sharp as a three-legged dancing monkey by using my Work Sharp, Ken Onion model. So you have to ask yourself, do you want a sharp knife or a classical Scandi blade? I'll go for the sharp knife every time. My blade work isn't so fine as to require a perfect Scandi grind.
Recently, I've had the "itch" to reprofile a knife or 2. Presently I own a Work Sharp Ken Onion with blade grinder attachment. I've found out that there is a coarser, more rigid set of belts, than the stock set of 5 belts that come stock with the blade grinder attachment. The media of the stuff belt kit is ceramic and produced by Norton.
Super sharp but when trying feather sticks…I am fairly new at feather sticks, it worked well and I say they were nice but I decided to go to a 20 and holy smokes the feather sticks and working on other projects on smaller sticks were much easier.
I've had my Ken Onion edition WorkSharp along with the blade grinding and tool grinding optional tools as well for about three years, never had any issues of any kind, the belts are industrial quality, affordable, and easy to get, it works especially well on hard to sharpen knives made of some of the newer super steels.
Amazon has the Work Sharp Guided Field Sharpener on sale for under 19 bucks. After watching a few review videos on this about 6 months ago, I picked one up for $25 and could not be happier. It's a great thing to have in a pack and has a ton of options (including removable plates for sharpening other tools).
Unless you specifically want a convex edge, the Work Sharp is not what I would use for a scandi grind. A stone works much better at preserving the original grind. daltonboy7154
I use a KME to put most of my knives at 20 dps then use the bench top Work Sharp for touching them up if they need more than just a stropping. I have 3 or 4 of the Work Sharp Field sharpeners in different bags, they work great as well. Sent from my XT1254 using Tapatalk