by Joe Talmadge
Contents:
I. Introduction to the Blade Geometry FAQ
II. Blade Characteristics
- The Belly
- The Re-Curved Belly
- Bellies and Angles
- The Point
- Blade Thickness
- Edge Thickness
- The Primary-Bevel Edge
III. Blade Grinds
- The Hollow Grind
- The Chisel Grind
- The Sabre Grind
- The Flat Grind
- The Convex Grind
- The Dual-Ground Reinforced Tanto
IV. Blade Shapes, and What They're Good For
- The Clip Point
- The Drop Point
- The Tanto
* Americanized Tanto
* Chisel-Ground Tanto
- The Sheepsfoot
- The Dagger
- The Spear Point
- The Trailing Point
V. Steel and Blade Geometry
VI. Putting It All Together
- Two Combat/Utility Knives
- The Camp Knife
- Three Folders
- A Hunter (Classic Loveless and A.G.R. Deerhunter)
- A Custom-Made Folder
I. Introduction to the Blade Geometry FAQ
Welcome to the blade geometry FAQ. Our objective is to provide a
working knowledge of blade shapes and grinds. After reading the FAQ,
I hope you'll be better able to answer the question, "I need to do job
X, what kinds of knives should I consider?". We will start with some
general characteristics of blade shapes, then talk about blade grinds,
then put it all together to discuss specific blade patterns. The last
section, a brief analysis of some common designs, will build upon the
previous sections. It's important to keep in mind that the
characteristics can be as important as blade shape. When you're done
with the FAQ, you should be able to make decisions not only on blade
shape but on other attributes. If you need to slice, you'll know to
look for a nice curving belly -- and not get hung up on what the
ostensible blade shape is supposed to be.
II. Blade Characteristics
- The Belly
The belly of a blade is the curving section under the point. Some
knives do not have a curving section (e.g., Americanized tanto),
others are mostly curve (e.g., skinner). The belly increases the
knife's ability to both slice and slash. It presents an ever-changing
angle to the material being cut, and this means slicing efficiency is
preserved across the cut.
If slicing and slashing are important to you, you want to look for a
nice curving belly. However, there are always tradeoffs. Typically,
the more belly a knife has, the less acute its point. So you get
better slicing, but piercing ability goes down. A knife with tons of
belly is the Emerson Commander (which actually has a recurved belly),
and you can see the point on this knife is not very acute. Trailing
point skinners are basically all belly, because you do nothing but
slice with them. A knife with little belly is the classic F-S dagger,
and this knife has an incredible point for piercing but is not a great
slicer/slasher.
So you trade off belly (slicing) for point (piercing). There are some
games that can be played here. For example, if the knife design has
lots of belly for slicing, the designer can clip the point and add a
falsed edge to make it a bit sharper.
- The Re-curved Belly
When the belly of the knife is S-shaped, it is called a re-curved
belly. The Emerson Commander has a very sharp re-curve, so does the
Cold Steel Vaquero Grande. The Darrel Ralph Krait has a more subtle
recurve.
The recurved belly presents more edge to the material being cut, and
in slicing forces the material into the edge. It is an even better
slicer/slasher, and in a big knife (see some of Walter Brend's
knives), can make for excellent chopping geometry as well.
The downside of this design is that it is *very* difficult to
sharpen. Freehand on a big stone, it's nearly impossible. Some of
the sharpening rigs available make the job easier, but in any case
it's still difficult.
- Bellies and Angles
Another way to improve edge angles without introducing the
hard-to-sharpen recurved blade is by playing with the angles between
the edge and handle. Ond way to do this is with a forward rake. This
means that if you're holding the knife in your hand, spine parallel to
the ground, the knife's edge is *not* parallel to the ground, but
rather angles down toward the ground (from handle as it goes towards
the tip) before it goes up towards the tip. A forward rake provides
more edge for the blade size. The Mad Dog ATAK is a knife with a
forward rake. The BM spike shows the opposite -- a negative rake --
where the edge just goes straight up towards the tip right from the
beginning. A foward rake generally provides more edge and belly, a
negative rake provides a sharper point. Another method is to join the
blade and handle at an angle.
This exaggerates the angle change for slicing, slashing, or chopping,
and this in turn increases performance. The chopping ability of the
kukri, the chopping/slashing/slicing ability of the ATAK, and the
slicing ability of the AFCK are due in part to this.
- The Point
The point is, obviously, what the knife pierces with. Like everything
else, designing the point is a game of compromises. To pierce really
well, there needs to be as little metal as possible up front, so a
piercing point is thin and incredibly sharp. The downside is that the
sharper the point, the weaker it is.
For some designs, like a dagger, the objective of the design is to
pierce. So a dagger has a thin point, sharp on both sides to decrease
the profile and to enable the knife to cut its way in from all sides.
Other designs, like the skinner, put the point up and out of the way
since the objective of the design is to slice. The Americanized tanto
has a very strong point, due to the spine being full thickness very
close to the point. This means it won't penetrate anything like a
dagger into a soft target, but the massively strong point can survive
a thrust into a very hard target that would break a dagger point.
Some tricks can be employed to make the point stronger (and worse at
piercing) or sharper (and weaker). A false edge can be ground into a
point to make it pierce better, for example.
The other important decision about the point is where to put it. It
can be placed to provide a number of characteristics. Some knives
place the point down almost at the edge. For example, the
Japanese-style chef knife, the santuko, has this format. The knife is
used to chop food and do long slices, so a low point means maximum
straight edge length. The trailing point hunter, which is used for
slicing in a way which requires a belly, puts the point way up high
and out of the way. Knives whose points require maximum control -- a
hunter used for dressing out game, or a defensive knife -- want the
point to be in line with the users hand. This usually means the point
must be below the spine of the blade. There are a number of methods
to achieve this, such as dropping the point in a convex curve (drop
point format), a concave curve (clip point format), or straight line
(still called a clip point, usually).
- Blade Thickness
Blade thickness or thinness is important to both strength and cutting
ability of the knife. A thick blade will generally be stronger. But
a thin blade will generally have a thinner edge -- and thin edges cut
easier and better. So the choice of blade thickness is driven by the
compromise of strength vs. cutting ability, just like the choice of
point type.
Once the blade thickness is chosen, the particular grind type (see
below) can reinforce the attributes of that thickness, or try to make
up for any weakness. For example, on a thick blade, a flat or hollow
grind can be utilized, so that even though the spine is thick &
strong, the edge is thin and cuts a bit better than expected. Or on a
thin blade, a sabre grind can be used to make the edge a bit
stronger than it would otherwise be. Of course, the grind can
reinforce rather than counteract the blade thickness.
- Edge Thickness
The thickness of the edge is another tradeoff in strength vs. cutting
ability. The thinner the edge, generally the better it will cut, but
a thin edge is weak and can chip out or roll over faster than a thick
edge. A thick edge is strong, but doesn't cut as well.
The blade shape, plus the thickness of the blade spine, combined with
the grind type, determines the edge thickness.
The edge thickness is one of the only factors that can be modified
easy by the knife owner (rather than the maker). Remember that if
you're not happy with the way a knife is performing, there's no reason
you're stuck with the factory edge. Feel free to re-sharpen, grinding
a lower-angle thinner edge into the knife. At some point, if you go
too thin the edge will start chipping out, that's an indication that
you need to thicken the edge back up. Also see the Sharpening FAQ.
- The Primary-Bevel Edge
Normally, a knife has two bevels. If you look at, say, a kabar, you
will first see a bevel at starts from the middle of the knife and goes
most of the way towards the edge. I'll call this the primary bevel.
Then at the very edge itself, there is *another* bevel. at a higher
angle, that forms the actual edge. I'll call this the secondary
bevel. Most knives have this kind of geometry, where a shallow
primary bevel meets a bigger secondary edge bevel. This leave the
edge a bit thicker for robustness.
However, some knives do not have a secondary bevel to form the edge.
Scandanavian knives, like the Finnish puukko, only have a single
bevel. So ostensibly, the puukko is a sabre grind (see below).
However, because the primary bevel goes all the way down to the edge,
the edge ends up being a thin high-performance edge rather than a
thicker stronger edge. Combined with the normally thin blades on the
puukko, the edge ends up being thin enough to cut really well.
Similarly, some chisel-ground knives also feature a primary-bevel
edge. Again, it guarantees thinness and sharpness at the edge. The
most popular chisel-ground folder, Benchmade's CQC7, has an edge that
is formed by a secondary bevel. However, many other chisel-ground
knives do not have the secondary bevel.
III. Blade Grinds
- The Hollow Grind
The hollow grind is done by taking two concave scoops out of the side
of the blade. Many production companies use this grind, because it's
easier to design machines to do it. But many custom makers grind this
way as well. Its great advantage is that the edge is extraordinarily
thin, and thin edges slice better. The disadvantage is that the
thinner the edge, the weaker it is. Hollow ground edges can chip or
roll over in harder use. And the hollow ground edge can't penetrate
too far for food-type chopping, because the edge gets non-linearly
thicker as it nears the spine.
For designs where slicing is important, but the slice doesn't need to
go too deep, this grind is an excellent choice. Many hunting knives
are hollow ground, because field dressing is often best done with a
knife that slices exceptionally well through soft tissues.
Unfortunately, if you hit a bone, you can chip the edge, so the flat
grind (see below) is also used often.
Another advantage of the hollow ground knife, at least at the
beginning, is ease of sharpening. Most hollow grinds thicken slightly
towards the edge. That means that as you sharpen (at least at first),
the blade gets thinner and easier to sharpen. After this, however,
the blade begins thickening non-linearly and sharpening will become
more difficult.
The ultimate push cutter, the straight razor, is usually hollow
ground.
- The Chisel Grind
The chisel grind is a knife which is not ground at all on one side.
So it is completely flat on one side, and has a bevel on the other.
It is simple to produce (the maker need only grind one side),
and simple to sharpen (it is sharpened on one side only, then the burr
is stropped off the other side). It is also typically very sharp, due
to the single bevel design. Whereas a blade ground on both sides
might be sharpened at 20 degrees per side, for a total of 40-degrees
edge angle, a chisel ground blade is often ground at around 30
degrees, making for a thin (and thus sharp) edge.
Accurate slices are very difficult with the chisel grind, due to the
fact that the non-symmetrical design forces the knife to curve in the
medium being cut.
- The Sabre Grind
The sabre grind is a strong edge format. The bevel starts around the
middle of the blade, and proceeds flatly towards the edge. This
leaves a strong edge for chopping and other hard use. But it also
means the edge will be fairly thick, so this design will not
necessarily slice all that well.
The sabre grind is found on many military classic designs such as the
Randall #1 and the kabar.
- The Flat Grind
The flat grind endeavors to provide an edge that is both thin and
strong, and leaves a strong thick spine. The grind is completely
flat, going from the spine to the edge. This grind is harder to make,
because a lot of steel needs to be ground away. However, the edge
ends up being fairly thin and so cutting very well. Because the
bevels are flat, there is plenty of metal backing the edge, so it's
much stronger than a hollow grind. It is not as strong as a sabre
grind, but will outcut that grind.
The edge on this design also penetrates better for slicing and
chopping. The hollow grind expands non-linearly as you go up the
blade, the sabre grind expands linearly but very quickly. The flat
grind expands linearly and slowly. Kitchen knives are usually flat
ground, because when chopping/slicing food you need to push the blade
all the way through the food. This grind is an outstanding compromise
between strength and cutting ability, sacrificing little for either.
- The Convex Grind
Also called the Moran grind, after Bill Moran. This grind is as you
would expect, the grind arcs down in a convex curve down to the edge.
This means the point can be very sharp, because there's no secondary
bevels to create the edge itself, just two intersecting arcs. There
is also a fair amount of steel behind the edge, because the convex
arcs cause the edge to widen non-linearly. This is a strong-edge
format, which won't penetrate like a flat grind but will be stronger.
Knifemakers form this grind on a flat-belt grinder. A disadvantage of
this grind is if you don't have a flat-belt grinder yourself, it is
difficult to touch up the edge.
- The Dual-Ground Reinforced Tanto
The Americanized tanto as executed by Cold Steel shows multiple grind
types. Along the long flat, the knife is hollow ground, for a thin
edge and incredible sharpness. However, along the front up to the
point, the grind switches to a flat grind. This provides incredible
tip strength. The result is a knife with a very keen bottom edge, but
a strong profile towards the front where it pierces. Of course, the
reinforced front edge is strong but doesn't pierce easily.
IV. Blade Shapes, and What They're Good For
- The Clip Point
A great all-around format and one of the most popular, it's used on
everything from the famous Buck 110 folder, to the Randall #1 fighter,
to most bowies. The format has a concave or straight cut-out at the
tip (the "clip"). This makes the point sharper, and also lowers it
for more control. Clip point blades usually also provide plenty of
belly.
The tip is controllable and sharp, and the belly provides good
slicing/slashing, and so this format is popular on formats from
utility knives to camp knives to fighters to hunting knives.
- The Drop Point
Another great all-around format, this pattern is used on many knives
but is most popular on hunters. The tip is lowered (dropped) via a
convex arc from the spine. This lowers the point for great
controllability. The point retains great strength. Most drop point
patterns also retain plenty of belly.
Due to the very controllable point, this pattern is very popular on
hunting knives, where it's important to keep the point from nicking an
organ. The inclusion of plenty of belly makes it a good slicer and
slasher. This format is also popular on utility knives and even
fighters, where the strong point can hold up to heavy use. The point
on a drop point usually won't be quite as sharp as that on a
clip-point, but will be stronger.
- The Tanto (Americanized and Chisel-Ground)
The Americanized tanto, popularized by Cold Steel, is usually
dual-ground for point strength and sharpness along the straight edge.
The point is directly along the spine. The front edge meets the long
straight edge at a sharp angle, forming the "secondary point". The
blade is often dual-ground, with a hollow grind along the straight
edge, and a flat grind of sorts up front.
The point on this format is incredibly strong, due to the spine
keeping its full width until very close to the point, and then a
strong flat grind being used to create the point. There is a lot of
metal up front at that point, which makes this format not the best
piercer into soft materials, but incredibly strong and able to survive
thrusting into very hard materials. The high point also provides less
control than the drop- and clip-point formats.
The hollow ground straight edge is very sharp. There is no belly per
se, so slicing can be awkward, and this is not the best format for
general utility use since a belly is so useful for that. For hard use
where a very strong point is needed, this format is exceptional. The
very sharp hollow-ground straight edge performs very well for any job
that doesn't require a belly. For slashing, the promotors of this
format claim the secondary point positively reinforces the slash, so
even though the design is bellyless it still slashes well.
A hot trend today is chisel-ground tantos. These knives usually have
a basic Americanized tanto shape, often with the point clipped. But
it is ground on one side one, usually a sabre grind (rather than the
dual-ground Americanized tanto popularized by Cold Steel). Many
chisel-ground tantos have one a single bevel to the edge, with no
secondary bevel to form the edge itself, which leaves the format very
sharp. Aside from the lack of belly, the non-symmetrical grind makes
this type of knife difficult to cut straight, making it even less
useful for general utility. The extremely thin edge cuts well for
shallow cuts, but the edge usually reaches full spine thickness
relatively quickly, so deep-cutting performance can suffer.
I have not discussed the classic Japanese tanto shape, because that
design is not seen much in everyday cutlery.
- The Sheepsfoot
The sheepsfoot blade really can't be said to have a point. The spine
curves down to meet the edge. The objective of this format is to
provide an edge that can be used for cutting, while minimizing the
chances that anything delicate will be accidently pierced by the
point. For example, it is marketed to emergency personnel, who may
have to cut a person out of their seatbelt at an accident scene, and
don't want to risk stabbing the victim in the process. Also this
pattern is popular among sailors, and the explanations here vary
depending on who you talk to. It may be because when their knife is
out, the sailors don't want to risk accidently puncturing a sail. Or,
as the legend goes, it may be because when sailors have pointy knives,
they end up stabbing each other with them. Pick your fave.
The Japanese style chef's knife, the Santuko, also is close to this
format, though the belly on that knife curves slightly. There's no
need for a point for the usage of this knife, so the dropped point
maximizes the straight edge length.
- The Dagger
The dagger's format provides the ultimate in piercing soft targets.
The format tapers to a very thin very sharp point, which pierces
easily and deeply into soft targets, but is weak and can (and does)
break on hard targets. The dagger usually has two sharp edges, to
reduce the profile and let the knife cut in on both sides.
The dagger usually has little or no belly per se, instead tapering
in relatively straight line towards the point, though you will see
great variations in the degree to which there's a curve towards the
point. In addition, both edges are ground from the exact center of
the blade. The geometry, between the lack of belly and the
quickly-thickening edges, is not good for slicing/slashing.
- The Spear Point
A "real" spear point is what you would find on a spear -- point
exactly in the center of the blade, both edges sharpened. But when
knives are described as "spear point", this describes a special case
of a drop point. In a drop point, the point drops slightly from the
spine of the blade. In a spear point, the point drops all the way to
the center of the blade. Point controllability is excellent, and the
point is strong (but dull if not double-edged), and with the point so
low the belly is rather small.
- The Trailing Point
The trailing point format has a point that's as high or higher than
the blade spine, and a big long curving belly. The belly is the
objective of this format, and it's used for jobs where slicing is the
most important function. It is very popular on skinning knives, where
lots of belly comes in handy for slicing. The point is high and out
of the way, it may function slightly as a piercer, but on some
trailing point knives the point is nonfunctional.
- The Hook Blade
The edge on a hook blade curves in a concave manner. This type of
knife was traditionally used for gardening, and it has gained some
acceptance for utility use. For shallow slicing, the material to be
is place on the edge near the handle. As the knife is pulled, the
geometry of the curve forces the material into the edge nearer the
tip, and slicing performance is good. Or you can just pierce material
with the tip and just pull the knife, the edge will function the same
way. This format works well as a slicer when you can get the material
positioned in the "sweet spot" of the curve (e.g., pruning). This
basically means the material to be cut needs to have a smaller radius
than the blade itself, so hook blades work well for pruning but would
have a harder time slicing a tomato.
V. Steel and Blade Geometry
Does the blade geometry have any affect on the steel used? Well,
indirectly. In theory, the blade geometry is designed for a certain
function, and the steel chosen will also be one suited for that
function. This doesn't mean there's an obvious answer as to which
steel should be used on which knife -- quite the opposite, there are
almost always lots of different steels that will work well for a
particular knife. But understanding the strengths and weaknesses of
both the blade geometry and the steel will help you decide which
combinations you desire.
For blade geometry, we're often playing off cutting ability versus
toughness. For steels, we're playing off toughness versus edge
holding versus stainlessness versus sharpenability.
For a salt water dive knife, we may choose a cheap stainless steel
(which are usually *very* stainless due to low carbon content) over a
high-carbon stainless or a carbon steel. For a machete, we usually
choose an inexpensive carbon steel, for economic and functional
reasons. Economically, the machete is meant to be an inexpensive
tool, and the inexpensive carbon steels are cheap, available, and easy
to work. Functionally, we have a thin-bladed machete, so we need all
the toughness we can get; also, we get easy sharpenability.
VI. Putting It All Together
Okay, now we know the characteristics, grinds, and blade shapes, and
what they are all good for. If you understand this, you can begin to
see how to mix and match features to fine-tune a knife for the
functions you want. For example, you may want a tanto, but are
willing to sacrifice some of the point strength for control and
piercing ability. Having read the FAQ, you know you can clip the
point (controllability) and thin the edge via a false edge (piercing
ability), which is exactly the approach Benchmade took with their
Stryker. Or if you want your tanto to slice a bit better, you can
make the straight edge slightly convex to simulate a belly -- the
approach taken by Microtech on their SOCOM tanto. By
mixing-n-matching, we can enhance a design's strengths or sacrifice a
little to make up for a deficiency somewhere else.
With that in mind, let's briefly examine some popular knife designs,
and see if we can figure out why the designers made the choices they
did.
- Two Combat/Utility Knives
The Marine Corps' kabar combat/utility knife is a classic. It's a
clip point design, with a false edge that is sometimes sharpened.
This makes the point very sharp, and easy to control in thrusts. As
with most clip points, there is a nice belly for slicing. This makes
it suitable for fighting and utility uses.
The grind chosen was a sabre grind. This makes the edge very strong,
but sacrifices cutting ability (versus a flat grind). In theory, the
sabre grind might have been chosen because of the very hard use and
abuse this knife may go through, not just as a knife but as a pry bar
or hole digger. At least as importantly, the sabre grind is faster
and cheaper to produce than a flat grind, important when many knives
have to be turned out.
The Mad Dog ATAK takes a different route, going with a thick spine and
flat grind, but retaining the clip-point format. The flat grind means
the edge will outcut the kabar, and the thick spine helps assure
robustness for hard use (as does the differential heat treatment). A
forward rake (also discussed above) enhances chopping and slicing
performance. Sort of a high-performance version of the standard
combat/utility knife, more expensive to produce but outperforming the
standard in just about every other category.
- The Camp Knife
Camp knives are generally big, 8" or more. They're almost always flat
ground, for good edge performance. The job of this kind of knife is
to do camp chores, from chopping limbs to splitting kindling to food
prep to anything else. The flat grind provides great performance, and
the usual clip- or drop-point format provides point control when
needed. Size and weight is needed for chopping effectiveness.
- Three Folders
The tactical folder craze has spawned many folders with sabre grinds,
and that emphasizes strength over cutting ability. But there are a
few folders that consistently do very well in cutting tests.
The Sebenza had a straight clipped point, for excellent control, and
plenty of belly. A very high hollow grind provides a thin edge, for
great push-cutting and slicing.
The AFCK has a sabre grind, but still performs wonderfully. The blade
is relatively thin, so even with the sabre grind the edge remains
fairly thin and performs well. In addition, the blade is at an angle
to the handle, providing even better slicing and slashing
performance. The straight-clipped point is very sharp and
controllable.
These two folder makers have made different design decisions, but both
have achieved excellent results. The main objectives -- a working
point, a belly, and a thin edge -- are achieved through different
designs.
The Microtech SOCOM tanto is another design worth examining. It is
ostensibly an Americanized tanto. However, the designers have made a
large number of interesting tweaks to enhance the design. First, for
point control, the point is clipped slightly and the blade meets the
handle at an angle -- both of these things bring the point in-line for
control. To make the point a better piercer, the front bevel is at a
much smaller angle to the point than is normally seen. The normally
straight edge is slightly curved, and combined with the low-angle
front edge, the secondary point ends up not very sharp. So this is a
tanto with a bit of a belly, and combined with the blade/handle angle,
functions well as a slasher/slicer. Lastly, Microtech ground in false
edge bevels on the spine, which disappear near the point. This leaves
the point full width for strength, but removes some weight (and adds
good looks) along the spine.
- A Hunter
A.G. Russell's Deerhunter is a drop-point format, and is flat ground
like many hunters, to provide a thin edge that cuts exceptionally
well. To improve the geometry even more, the spine is <.125", making
the entire package extraordinarily thin. As a result, the knife
wouldn't be a great choice for prying, but for slicing and
push-cutting it is outstanding.
- A Custom-Made Folder
To show the kind of tweaking that can be done, I will describe a
custom folder I had made for me by Allen Elishewitz. The blade has
the dual-grind of a tanto. That is, flat grind up front near the
point, hollow grind along the straight edge. However, this knife is
not a tanto, it is a drop point. So this knife has the tip strength
of a tanto, but the useful belly of a drop point, and a dropped point
for better control. In addition, the point has false edge bevels
ground in, which makes it penetrate a bit better. In short, we took
the massive point strength of a tanto, but ground it on the more
useful utility shape like a drop point, then ground in bevels to make
piercing ability a bit better. Tweak and tune!