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Blade Steel:
Maxamet
Maxamet didn’t begin its life in the knife world. Instead, it comes from an industrial background that prioritized extreme hardness and wear resistance. Carpenter Technology originally developed Maxamet as part of its Micro-Melt family of powdered metallurgy tool steels, a line created for tooling environments where components face continuous abrasion, heavy pressure, and constant mechanical contact. Steels in this family were engineered to outperform traditional high-speed steels by offering finer carbide distribution and higher...
Recent Articles
Blade Steel:
CPM Rex 121
When knife enthusiasts discuss steels that stretch the limits of what a cutting edge can do, CPM Rex 121 is almost always part of the conversation. It is one of the most alloy-rich and abrasion-resistant steels ever produced by Crucible Industries, and although it was never designed for knives, it has earned a reputation as an extreme performer in specialized cutting tools. Understanding why requires looking at its development as an industrial steel, the unusual recipe that defines it, and the small but dedicated group of makers who work with it today...
Erasteel
Erasteel’s history begins long before the company took its modern form. Its earliest origins can be traced to European steelmaking centers that eventually merged their operations. In Sweden, the Söderfors forge began producing iron in 1676 and continued doing so for generations. Other Swedish works at Vikmanshyttan, Langshyttan, and Österbybruk grew through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In France, steel production expanded throughout the nineteenth century at Commentry and Champagnole. These facilities operated independently for decades, but their production methods...









