I don't understand why you think 12lbs of force applied to a knife is such an extreme amount.Mage7 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 22, 2026 9:26 amThat 12 lbs of cutting force is more than enough to cut a carrot with a butter knife.vivi wrote: ↑Sun Mar 22, 2026 9:16 amI don't understand the point you are trying to make. Could you clarify?Mage7 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 22, 2026 8:44 am
Well, in that case, I think I know of the perfect knife for you. It's super tough steel too!
The last sentence is kind of what in pointing out though. When we're talking about CATRA, we're already dealing with cutting forces that are high enough to drive a butter knife through a carrot. I dunno anyone that would call that sharp. Except maybe vivi but I'm still waiting to see how he'll respond![]()
I'm not sure what tasks you're doing that requires that much cutting force, particularly in the kitchen--and no, chopping doesn't count. If you were doing that all day, every day I couldn't imagine how sore you'd get. Imagine dicing carrots at 10 lbs per slice. Who'd need a gym membership.
Maybe you haven't actually measured the forces you're cutting at. I figured cutting a carrot with a butter knife would be a good demonstration of how 12 lbs is a lot more than it seems. If it's still not made an impression, maybe you should actually go try it for yourself and see how many cutting tasks you do reach or exceed that force. If you're still going to insist that twelve pounds isn't much after that then it speaks volumes more than I could.
I do that often, despite using thin stock knives with thin edges that cleanly shave.
It seems to me you are looking down your nose at me for having a different set of cutting tasks in my day to day life than you?
That doesn't seem conducive towards good conversation.
Why wouldn't chopping count? I chop with machetes often, those are just long knives.
The other day I took my Winkler Belt knife and hammered it through some scrap wood with a rubber mallet to flatten out a section. I was building a bench for my kids fort out of it. Definitely applied more than 12lbw of force with the mallet.
Cutting double and triple wall cardboard often requires more than 12lbs of force.
12lbs of force is such a low number, I'm confused why you're hung up on it.
It takes more than 12lbs of force to cube a pound of butter. Something I do every day I work.

Cutting taro roots requires more than 12lbs of force too. Lots of foods do.
I still don't understand what point you are driving at.

