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Blade Steel: 7Cr17MoV
7Cr17MoV is a widely used stainless steel that occupies a very different place in the modern knife world than high-end powder metallurgy alloys. It is a Chinese-produced martensitic stainless steel derived from the same general family as 440A, developed to offer strong corrosion resistance, ease of maintenance, and consistent performance at a more accessible cost. Its designation follows the Chinese GB standard naming system, where the “7” indicates approximately 0.7 percent carbon, “Cr17” reflects roughly 17 percent chromium, and the added molybdenum and vanadium (MoV)...
Recent Articles
Blade Steel: AUS-10A
AUS-10A is a Japanese stainless steel developed by Aichi Steel, part of a broader family that includes AUS-6 and AUS-8. It was engineered to improve on earlier compositions by increasing carbon and optimizing alloying elements to create a more capable, well-rounded blade steel. In practice, AUS-10A occupies a middle ground between traditional stainless steels like 440C and more modern, higher-alloy powder steels, offering a balance that has made it increasingly common in production knives over the past decade. At its core, AUS-10A is defined by a carefully balanced composition. With carbon...
Blade Steel: CTS 204P
CTS 204P is a modern high-alloy stainless steel that emerged from the rapid development of powder metallurgy tool steels in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Produced by Carpenter Technology Corporation, it belongs to the company’s CTS series of steels and is manufactured using Carpenter’s Micro-Melt powder metallurgy process. The alloy was originally named Micro-Melt 20-4 when it was introduced in 2009, but it was soon renamed CTS-204P in 2010, as it entered broader industrial use. While it was initially designed for the grueling demands of...









