by Joe Talmadge
Contents:
I. Introduction
II. Plain vs. Serrated: The Conventional View
III. Plain vs. Serrated Re-thought
IV. What Should I Carry?
V. Thoughts On The Partially-Serrated Blade
I. Introductions
There's been a jump in recent years in the popularity of serrated edges,
and there's often confusion as to when a serrated edge is advantageous,
versus when a plain edge is advantageous. The question comes up often in
rec.knives.
For our discussion, we'll need to talk about what we're doing with the
knife. Think about what you can do with a knife: you can shave, slice,
slash, saw, hack, chop, etc. For our purposes, we'll divide all knife uses
into two very broad categories:
Push cuts: The main cutting is done by pushing the edge through the
thing-to-be-cut. For example, when you shave, you push the edge of the
knife through your beard. When peeling an apple, you push the edge under
the skin of the apple. When chopping wood, you try to push the edge into
and through the wood.
Slicing cuts: The cutting action is substantially done by dragging the
edge across the thing-to-be-cut. When you slice meat or a tomato, you drag
the edge across the tomato as you cut through it. Slicing and sawing are
examples of slicing cuts.
II. Plain vs. Serrated: The Conventional View
In general, the plain edge is better than the serrated when the application
involves push cuts. Also, the plain edge is superior when extreme control,
accuracy, and clean cuts are necessary, regardless of whether or not the
job is push cuts or slices.
In general, the serrated edge will work better than the plain edge for
slicing cuts, especially through hard or tough surfaces, where the serrations
tend to grab and cut the surface easily. Some of the cutting power of the
serrated edge is due to its format alone; thus, even a dull serrated edge
knife will often perform competently at slicing jobs. The serrated edge
gets its slicing ability from a number of factors. The high points on the
serrations will touch the material first, and this gives those points higher
pressure per area than if the same pressure was applied to a plain blade;
this allows the serration to puncture more easily. In addition, serrations
are normally chisel-ground into the blade, which means they are thinner
(and thus cut better) than the comparable plain blade.
The plain edge will work better for applications like shaving, skinning
an apple, skinning a deer. All those applications involve either mostly
push cuts, or the need for extreme control. Serrations work really well
on things like tough rope or wood, where the serrations bite through quickly.
Generally, the more push cuts are used, the more necessary it is for
the plain edge to have a "razor polished" edge. A knife edge
becomes more polished when you move to higher and higher grit stones. Generally,
1200-grit is considered polished; a 6000+ grit Japanese water stone would
polish the edge further.
One interesting case is cutting a tomato. In theory, you can just push
a blade through a tomato, so a razor polished plain edge would work fine.
However, the tomato is soft, and unless your plain edge knife is very sharp,
the tomato will simply squish when you start pushing. You can (and many
people do) use a slicing motion with your plain blade, but if it's even
a little dull it won't cut well and it may not even break the skin. Use
a sawing motion with a serrated knife (even a dull one), and your tomato
will slice fine.
You will read about test after test where the above view is confirmed.
That is, the plain edge excels in push cuts, and the serrated excels in
slicing cuts. This confirms the conventional view @... to an extent.
III. Plain vs. Serrated Re-thought
Since actual tests confirm the truth of the conventional view, what
more is there to be said? The problem is that the tests are often not as
thorough as they need to be. That is, when testing plain vs. serrated performance,
most tests are comparing a plain polished edge to a serrated edge. Given
that, it is no surprise that the serrated blade easily outperforms the
plain blade when cutting (for example) rope.
A polished edge is not the only choice with a plain blade. One can get
the plain edge to perform much differently when sharpened with coarser
stone. People who cut rope often use a plain edge sharpened on a file,
to get an incredibly coarse, "micro-serrated" edge that performs
wonderfully at slicing jobs. So the knife testers are testing with polished
plain edges, whereas people experienced with cutting rope use coarsely-ground
plain edges.
Whether or not serrated blades will out-slice coarse-ground plain blades
seems to depend on the medium being cut. Harder materials (or materials
under tension) do well for serrated blades. With softer materials, the
serrations will sometimes catch and unwind the material rather than cut
-- in this case, coarse-ground plain blades may easily out-slice serrated
blades.
So the claim that serrated edges work better than plain edges for slicing
needs to be re-examined. It appears that as materials get harder or put
under more tension, the serrated edge may slice a bit better than a coarse-ground
plain edge. As the material gets softer and looser, the coarse-ground plain
edge may slice a bit better. And as we go towards push cuts, the polished
plain edge comes into its own. The user may want to experiment on those
materials that he often cuts, before choosing the edge format.
In addition, keep in mind that the coarse plain edge is much easier
to sharpen than the serrated edge. Just grab your file or extra coarse
stone, take a few swipes, and you're ready to go. With the serrated blade,
you'll need to find a sharpening rig with the special serrated blade sharpener.
Balancing this is the fact that serrated blades need to be sharpened less
often.
IV. What Should I Carry?
Should you carry a serrated blade or plain blade for everyday utility
carry? Unless you *know* that the majority of work you'll be doing heavily
favors slicing or pushing (e.g., "I spend all my time whittling"),
it may not matter much. My experience has been that general utility work
is usually general enough that either format works just fine, though these
days I tend to lean towards plain blades. Also keep in mind that by changing
your sharpening strategy on the plain edge, you can significantly change
its characteristics. If you do a lot of push cutting, you want to go with
a razor polished plain edge. If you do a lot of slicing, you'll need to
decide between a coarse-ground plain edge and a serrated edge. I don't
mind sharpening, so I lean towards plain blades, strategically sharpened
to the right grit (polished or coarse) for the jobs I happen do be doing.
Occasionally, people mention that the serrated edge looks intimidating
to the masses. This could be good if you're using this knife primarily
for self defense and want an intimidation factor. Or it could be bad, if
you're carrying for utility work and don't want to scare people (especially
the nice officer who pulled you over for speeding and asks to look at the
knife in your sheath). Rumor has it that airport guards are particularly
strict about serrated edges. Other than at airports, I don't think the
menacing appearance of the serrated edge is important enough either way
to affect what I carry.
V. Thoughts On The Partially-Serrated Blade
Another option is the combination plain/serrated edge. This format appears
to have overtaken the all-serrated format. Typically, the 50%-60% of the
blade nearest the tip is plain, while the back 40%-50% is serrated. There
are mixed feelings on this format. Many people swear by this format, and
feel that it is a good compromise, giving the user the choice of precise
push cuts from the plain edge, and the advantage of the serrated edge for
tougher materials. However, keep in mind that on a 3.25" blade, there's
maybe 1.25" of serrations. The detractors of this format feel that
1.25" is too short a length for the serrations to be really be useful,
and the length of the plain edge is being sacrificed for no good gain.
My own philosophy on partially-serrated blades at the moment is that
since I have both edge formats in one knife, I try to let each one shine
in their respective areas. So I'm razor polishing the plain edge part,
often on a 1200 grit diamond stone or even 6000 grit Japanese water stone,
and then stropping it. The plain edge is scary sharp for push cuts, and
I use the serrations when I need to cut through hard or fibrous material.
Partially-serrated blades are often serrated at the "wrong"
place. For example, for camp use, I might want the belly serrated for cutting
my steak, and the part near the handle razor-polished for whittling and
control-type usage. However, 99.9% of partially-serrated blades are ground
exactly the opposite: the ripping inaccurate serrations are at the control
part of the blade, and the plain part is out at the slicing part.
In theory, one can use a plain blade to get similar performance to a
partially-serrated blade. Just razor polish the plain blade, and then rough
up one part of the edge on a file, to get a knife that will excel at push
cuts at one point of the blade, and excel at slicing cuts at another.