Saturday, 11 October 2014

Angle Assistance


I'm going to give you a little help in determining how far you need to lift the spine of your knife off the stone to reach a desired angle, the math (sine) works, trust me.

Lets say you have a 2 inch wide knife, measured at the heel, always measure it at the heel to make this math work.

Ok now you want a 15 degree angle on the edge, that is 15 deg per side of course.

You take the width of the heel which in this case is 2 inches and  divide it by four.

So 2 which is the width of the knife divided by 4 is .5.

To get a 15 deg angle you raise the spine by 1/2 inch.

You can make a 1/2 guide from stacked quarters until it reaches .5 inch or the better way is to get a wine cork, so pull the cork, drink the wine and cut the cork at 1/2 inch and there you have a little guide.

What if you have a big knife, and it is 3inches wide at the heel and you want a 20 degree angle.
In this case, for a 20 deg angle measure  3 by 3 so the height to raise the spine is 1 inch.


If you want a: (Width is the width of knife at the heel)

20 deg angle divide the width by 3

15 deg angle divide the width by 4

12 deg angle divide the width by 5

These are the common angles and a two inch wide heel is a common width for many knives.

I got this info from a very good book called An Edge in the Kitchen by Chad Ward, I just thought I would share it.




Peter

No comments:

Post a Comment