Not for me, watched the whole ceramic knife come in when I was still a butcher and toughness was always the issue.
Aussie $$s lately and price may have me sit this one out.
(Having all my mules on a magnetic rack this would sit in a draw and probably get used less)
Good to see this bought to market , but will watch from the sidelines.
Will pick up a few sitting Mules just for the mule drop feel though…
Im a vegetarian as technically cows are made of grass and water.
The ceramic mule is spec'd at 2.5 oz as opposed to the steel mules which are typically 2.7 oz. So it is a little lighter. I think most of your desired weight savings will come from fitting very lightweight scales, perhaps pine or cedar.
Steel novice who self-identifies as a steel expert. Proud M.N.O.S.D. member 0003. Spydie Steels: 4V, 15V, 20CV, AEB-L, AUS6, Cru-Wear, HAP40, K294, K390, M4, Magnacut, S110V, S30V, S35VN, S45VN, SPY27, SRS13, T15, VG10, XHP, ZWear, ZDP189
Most definitely going to have to buy two or three ceramic mules--one to use, one to keep for the collection, and one to sell at an obscene mark up on ebay at some point in the future. Just have to make sure to sell it before the hypothetical product reveal in which Spyderco announces the upcoming release of several reasonably priced production models with ceramic blades, or I'll be like one of the schmucks on there now trying to sell a Magnacut mule for three hundred bucks.
Most definitely going to have to buy two or three ceramic mules--one to use, one to keep for the collection, and one to sell at an obscene mark up on ebay at some point in the future. Just have to make sure to sell it before the hypothetical product reveal in which Spyderco announces the upcoming release of several reasonably priced production models with ceramic blades, or I'll be like one of the schmucks on there now trying to sell a Magnacut mule for three hundred bucks.
You forgot one to break for testing……
There will be breaks…me thinks.
Im a vegetarian as technically cows are made of grass and water.
Most definitely going to have to buy two or three ceramic mules--one to use, one to keep for the collection, and one to sell at an obscene mark up on ebay at some point in the future. Just have to make sure to sell it before the hypothetical product reveal in which Spyderco announces the upcoming release of several reasonably priced production models with ceramic blades, or I'll be like one of the schmucks on there now trying to sell a Magnacut mule for three hundred bucks.
You forgot one to break for testing……
There will be breaks…me thinks.
Need to do some batoning of oak logs with knots in it because that’s the most important test of a knife instead of an axe or splitting maul.
Mule Team Army 001 (patched)
MNOSD 008 Stable Mules; Z-Max, Z-Wear, Magna Cut, Magna Max, SRS13, Rex 76, Rex T15.
Let's see if there would be a limit of how many one can buy. If the limit is 5 or none they'll fly off the shelf quickly. Personally I hope for a limit of 2. Later on if they're still in stock they can remove the limit. One for testing and abusing and the other for backup. Large quantities can help as well. Let's say 2000 or more would give a chance to everyone to grab some.
Is the hype behind this one really going to be that high? I was kind of surprised by the way people slept on the K294 and AEB-L Mules. I haven't really been hearing anyone talking about the elastic ceramics.
I'm still wondering how you can sharpen this stuff. That and not durability is the question running around in my head. I will be very curious to hear how from those who try these out.
Well, you probably won't have to often, is the plan. If I am lucky enough to get one, I'll probably just send it in if I ever need to. I know that's not what most forumites want to do though.
I'm still wondering how you can sharpen this stuff. That and not durability is the question running around in my head. I will be very curious to hear how from those who try these out.
Diamond lapping film was recommended
Mule Team Army 001 (patched)
MNOSD 008 Stable Mules; Z-Max, Z-Wear, Magna Cut, Magna Max, SRS13, Rex 76, Rex T15.
...there exists a white version of the HIC. It is significantly harder than the black one, it would be around 80 Rockwell C if converted from Vickers to Rockwell C, but the Rockwell C scale stops at 70HRC so that 80 HRC value is a very hypothetic one...
So back-translating, that must mean the Vickers number of the white material is around 1800-1900, somewhere around the same hardness as chromium. White aluminum oxide (like the Sharpmaker fine stones) has a Vickers of around 2200-2300. Tungsten carbide is around 2400 Vickers. Boron nitride (as in CBN) is around 3200 Vickers. Diamond around 10,000 Vickers. (If the charts I'm looking at are correct.) Earlier in this thread Sal mentions he's getting a good sharpening response off CBN rods (don't know if he's talking about the white or the black material) so that would hint that sharpening media >3200 Vickers might be able to sharpen this ceramic? And diamond should have no problem, hardness wise.
I haven't read the whole thread so don't know how the black material fits into the picture, hardness-wise. One would guess that the black is easier to sharpen than the white, based on hardness alone.
Steel novice who self-identifies as a steel expert. Proud M.N.O.S.D. member 0003. Spydie Steels: 4V, 15V, 20CV, AEB-L, AUS6, Cru-Wear, HAP40, K294, K390, M4, Magnacut, S110V, S30V, S35VN, S45VN, SPY27, SRS13, T15, VG10, XHP, ZWear, ZDP189
Looking forward to sharpening/polishing one or more of these on my Paper Wheels with fine diamond compounds.
BTW: coarse grits are counterproductive on ceramics, and polishing is a must for any edge longevity.
Big advantage however is that there will never be a burr, so once sharp it's sharp.