(10-31-2018, 12:15 PM)EOU Wrote: Not to turn this thread into a review of SET testing and edge rolling but it seems to us that one person's interpretation of SET testing data is just as valuable as the next persons. To us, subwoofer's review was amongst the most telling in that it showed us that, seemingly regardless of manufacturer, sharpness level or steel composition, that all edges roll and do so significantly under the same test conditions. SET testing is not definitive but evidentiary in nature and only gives us good reason to continue to question what we think we knew once.
Mike, you told me once "For me, I never fear the light, only the dark."
For those who can read numbers given in the SET tests on this forum, it is obvious that the SET testing is good for "working edge", but not for testing edges sharper than 250 BESS.
I'd suggest revisiting the raw data we've made available, including those for 12 dps ceramic knife
http://www.bessex.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=322
Ceramic edges don't roll, but respond the same way as steel knives - a single SET roll drops sharpness to 300 BESS, telling us that the impact is too much for the thin edge.
Reality is that quality knives roll less than mainstream, and hold the edge better along the whole range of sharpness, from razor sharp to working edge.
High-end knives and mainstream knives lose the initial keenness under 80 BESS similarly easy, but past this point the similarity ends.
Typically sharpness of a quality knife drops from the initial 40-60 BESS to 90 BESS, stays there for a few dozens of cuts, then moves into the 150-220 BESS range, and lasts there.
While a budget knife sharpness drops into the 300+ "working edge" range in the first dozen of cuts.
One does not need the SET-tester to know that, anyone with a BESS sharpness tester can see it.
You don't have to take my word for it, watch the tests done on high-end knives by the Sydney Sharpness Contest winner on YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcfBINH...QOA/videos
Summary of his tests:
http://knifegrinders.com.au/Manuals/High...ention.pdf
This does not lessen role of the standard SET tester, only defines the area of its applicability to "working edges" of 250-500 BESS.