The present invention relates to knives and more particularly, to a simplified and accurate method of sharpening a knife blade and a device for practicing the method.
Many gadgets to help speed and simplify the process of knife sharpening exist. Most involve a simple drag-through motion, using coarse cutting blades or electric powered abrasives, and are targeted at consumers, home cooks or sporting knife users. Those gadgets tend to produce blades with very coarse edges and remove more blade material than necessary. Serious knife users avoid them due to their unsatisfactory results for fine knife blades.
It is well known among expert knife/sword users that sharpening any type of blade with Japanese water stones can produce the finest results, though a high level of skill, and a lot of time is required. Time invested in years of practical experience, and sometimes hours invested in sharpening each blade.
Even for experienced knife sharpeners, the key difficulty with stones is maintaining an accurate angle between the moving blade held in the hand, and the fixed stone resting on the bench top. The compound curves of blades make the required 3D arc motion very complex and difficult for human operators. Very few Western knife users have mastered this difficult traditional stone sharpening skill. Even among those who have developed the competency, many often don't have time to use this time-consuming method.
In an effort to eliminate this inherent human error, many sharpening systems have been invented which mount a blade rigidly, then allow adjustment of the blade or the abrasive rod by various means. All the prior art in this field involves relatively complex jigs, fixtures, clamps, rod mounts, etc, and their complexity often requires as much time ins setup as that saved in sharpening. The perception is that they are generally too complex for the average home knife user, and they are therefore used by a small niche of enthusiasts.
The present invention eliminates human error from the sharpening process, while allowing for high quality traditional Japanese stones to be used, for finest results. In place of a traditional stone, any other suitable abrasive material can be used (such as diamond-coated metal rod, ceramic, composite resin abrasives, etc).
The process is ‘inverted’ from the traditional method, with the blade being held rigid on the bench, and the stone moved relative to the blade, sharpening from on top of the cutting edge. While a stone could be manipulated by hand while the blade is held rigid, many of the same dexterity challenges exist with following the compound blade/edge curve: just inverted. This invention eliminates the human error by providing a movable support which sets the angle between the stone and the blade simply and automatically.
The movable support can be designed so that when it is in turn inverted, it can automatically set another suitable angle for sharpening. For example, a combination stone with a coarse grit on one side can be set at an acute 15 degree angle to quickly form the primary bevel, while the other side of the stone has a very fine grit, and the holder when in this orientation forms a 25 degree angle to generate a very small and finely honed/polished secondary bevel. Both angles are formed to very high accuracy, with very little operator skill, and with very little time.
The holder can also be made with multiple slots so that different angles can be selected, or the holder can be made with an eccentric cam which can be rotated to finely adjust the angles, or any number of methods for changing the height of the holder relative to the abrasive stone or rod.
Furthermore, the holder can be made integral with the sharpening rod/plate from one rigid piece of material, for example a bent rod of metal with a different diamond coating grit on the top and bottom surfaces, like the stone example above but in one integral piece.
The blade can be held rigidly on the benchtop by any suitable means, like a magnetic rack, clamps, etc. The mounting surface for the blade can be inclined at a fixed angle to suit the desired cutting-edge angles, in interaction with the stone/rod holder angles. As mentioned, the abrasive holder can also be made to form different angles by any suitable lockable or rigid means, thereby compounding the available edge angles in conjunction with different blade mount angles.
To these and to such other objects that may hereinafter appear, the present invention relates to a knife blade sharpening device and method as described in detail in the following specification and recited in the annexed claims, taken together with the accompanying drawings in which
The device for sharpening the cutting edge of a knife blade includes a holder for retaining the knife blade in a fixed position with the cutting edge accessible from a position spaced from the cutting edge. A first end of a moveable abrasive part is aligned with the knife blade. The second end of the abrasive part is retained at a position which determines the angle of the abrasive surface relative to the holder when the first end of the abrasive part contacts the cutting edge. As the abrasive part is moved along the length of the knife blade, the cutting edge is sharpened.
Preferably, the holder retains the knife blade in a position in which the cutting edge is accessible from above and the abrasive part is situated above the holder. In one embodiment, the holder has a said holder have a generally triangular cross-sectional shape.
The second end of the abrasive part is retained in position by a retaining member which may have a ring-shaped body or may take the form of a clamp which can be attached to the end of the abrasive part in more than one position.
The abrasive part may be a stone or a rod with an abrasive surface.
Another aspect of the invention relates to a method of sharpening the cutting edge of a knife blade. The method includes the steps of: attaching the knife blade to a holder in a fixed position with the cutting edge accessible from a position spaced from the cutting edge; aligning one end of an abrasive part with the cutting edge of the knife attached to the holder; retaining the other end of the abrasive part to set the angle of the abrasive part relative to the holder, when the surface of the abrasive part contacts the cutting edge; and moving the abrasive part along the length of the knife blade to sharpen the cutting edge.
The step of attaching the knife to a holder includes retaining the knife blade in a position in which the cutting edge is accessible from above. The method further includes the step of positioning the abrasive part above the holder.
The step of retaining the other end of the abrasive part includes providing a retaining member. The retaining member may have a ring shape or a clamp which can be attached to the end of the abrasive part in more than one position.
The method further includes the step of configurating the holder to have a generally triangular cross-sectional shape.
The abrasive part may take the form of a stone or a rod with an abrasive surface.
The knife includes a blade 14 and a handle 16. In the drawings, the knife is shown in the sharpening position, with blade 14 supported by the holder with the cutting edge of the blade accessible from above. The holder may retain the knife blade on the holder by mechanical means such as a clamp (not shown) or magnetic means as disclosed in another embodiment.
Holder 10 is mounted on base 18 which may take the form of a workbench or any suitable surface which can fix the position of the holder. The height of holder 10 relative to the position of the abrasive part 12 automatically sets the angle of the abrasive part relative to the blade angle. Since the height of the holder usually fixed for any particular device, the angle of the abrasive rod will determine the blade angle.
A retaining member 20, depicted in this embodiment has having a ring-shape, is provided to support the end of abrasive rod 12 remote from the holder. The retaining member sets the angle of the abrasive rod relative to the holder.
During the sharpening process, the knife is held in a fixed position on the holder. The angle of the abrasive rod is set by the retaining member. The abrasive part is held above the knife and the abrasive part is moved back and forth along the length of the knife blade, as seen by the arrows, sharpening the cutting edge of the blade from above.
Abrasive part 12 may be a stone, as shown in
Instead of a single abrasive rod 12, two abrasive rods 12a and 12b can be employed, both connected to a single retaining member 20. As shown in
A highly effective double bevel edge is quickly generated with this embodiment, particularly when the narrow angle, for example 15 degrees, is a relatively coarse abrasive (for quickly shaping the edge), and the wider angle, for example 25 degrees, is a very fine abrasive to hone a small final cutting edge bevel.
The invention generates this famed, and elusive, double bevel cutting edge. Such an edge offers the best of both blade worlds: thin and fine for lower resistance to penetration, and a strong final cutting edge to resist impact damage.
Front and rear sections of tray 50 may include inclined surfaces for the magnetic blade holder, to allow for more variation of edge angles according to user preference.
While only a limited number of preferred embodiments of the present invention have been disclosed for purposes of illustration, it is obvious that many modifications and variations could be made thereto. It is intended to cover all of those modifications and variations which fall within the scope of the present invention, as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62943332 | Dec 2019 | US |