Of the two "magicsteel" irons that I ordered, the 10V iron showed up already.
Not sure if the other one has even been shipped, but the guy making the 10V irons in chicago has a good setup - instant information when you order it, continuous information through delivery only 1 1/2 days later.
I think this is something we tolerate from boutique toolmakers in general, that their information about delivery or stock aren't that great. The lake erie iron (ordered the day before) is now confirmed in the mail, and figure it'll get here in 4 or 5 days from order (it's coming from 1 1/2 hours away, but sometimes that's the same as being dropped off at a hub area across the country).
At any rate, the 10V iron is 16% vanadium carbide by volume, which must involve carbon, as it's <10% vanadium composition. However, 10% is a LOT of vanadium.
the seller said it's targeted at 60, i believe that's correct. Here's the "fact pattern" so far:
* the iron is very flat. It took about 1 minute to get the india stone to remove the grinding marks
* it can be honed on an india stone, but "not the right way, I suspect" - well, that's actually a factual statement. The india stone can abrade the matrix and maybe crush and break some of the vanadium carbides, but it cannot cut through them
* I have not yet honed it with "real diamonds", which will cut through vanadium like nothing
* I reground the bevel shallower, which i always do. This wasn't a problem on a ceramic belt, but it definitely even at lower than top end hardness didn't spark much and resisted the belt. Like abrades half as fast as more typical steels for us .If it was pushing higher hardness targets, it would be very slow grinding.
* the india stone does not leave cut marks in the surface of the iron at all - meaning grooves or lines. It just looks like sandy bits
* the feel of the iron at the outset matches the look of the steel - it's not fully sharp
the real test, given what I mentioned previously - there's no reason to sharpen anything with vanadium carbides with any media other than diamonds - will be how sharp it feels once it's "grooved" with small diamonds and then whether or not it wears to the "sandy" state around the carbides, or wears evenly
So far, for $45 shipped with a very expensive type of stock, the maker did an excellent job. I still don't have the feel that there's anything practical for the average woodworker compared to something like properly hard O1 or 80crv2.
Not sure if the other one has even been shipped, but the guy making the 10V irons in chicago has a good setup - instant information when you order it, continuous information through delivery only 1 1/2 days later.
I think this is something we tolerate from boutique toolmakers in general, that their information about delivery or stock aren't that great. The lake erie iron (ordered the day before) is now confirmed in the mail, and figure it'll get here in 4 or 5 days from order (it's coming from 1 1/2 hours away, but sometimes that's the same as being dropped off at a hub area across the country).
At any rate, the 10V iron is 16% vanadium carbide by volume, which must involve carbon, as it's <10% vanadium composition. However, 10% is a LOT of vanadium.
the seller said it's targeted at 60, i believe that's correct. Here's the "fact pattern" so far:
* the iron is very flat. It took about 1 minute to get the india stone to remove the grinding marks
* it can be honed on an india stone, but "not the right way, I suspect" - well, that's actually a factual statement. The india stone can abrade the matrix and maybe crush and break some of the vanadium carbides, but it cannot cut through them
* I have not yet honed it with "real diamonds", which will cut through vanadium like nothing
* I reground the bevel shallower, which i always do. This wasn't a problem on a ceramic belt, but it definitely even at lower than top end hardness didn't spark much and resisted the belt. Like abrades half as fast as more typical steels for us .If it was pushing higher hardness targets, it would be very slow grinding.
* the india stone does not leave cut marks in the surface of the iron at all - meaning grooves or lines. It just looks like sandy bits
* the feel of the iron at the outset matches the look of the steel - it's not fully sharp
the real test, given what I mentioned previously - there's no reason to sharpen anything with vanadium carbides with any media other than diamonds - will be how sharp it feels once it's "grooved" with small diamonds and then whether or not it wears to the "sandy" state around the carbides, or wears evenly
So far, for $45 shipped with a very expensive type of stock, the maker did an excellent job. I still don't have the feel that there's anything practical for the average woodworker compared to something like properly hard O1 or 80crv2.