With names like Vanax SuperClean, Elmax and M390, the current reality of knife steel seems to be mimicking science fiction. All three of these steel variants are colloquially known as “super steels,” a class whose roster includes only the highest quality metal available. The term has been around for decades and is becoming increasingly common, but what actually qualifies steel to earn “super” as a descriptor?
What Is Super Steel?
“There definitely is a performance difference โ it’s quantifiable,” says Martin Mills, who manages Benchmade’s technology center. The knife industry judges steel based on traits like corrosion resistance, edge retention, ability to withstand sudden impact (called toughness) and wear resistance, among others.
“When people refer to super steels, it’s largely edge retention,” explains Mills, referring to a blade’s ability to maintain a sharp cutting edge through regular use. (Everlasting sharpness does seem like something out of a fantasy novel.) Another key quality is corrosion resistance, a metal’s immunity from rust and acidic degradation.
The thing is, knife steel traits are often inversely related. Such is often the case with edge retention and corrosion resistance; dialing one up results in the other’s expense. But some of the manufacturing processes resulting in today’s super steels subvert the tendency.
A very basic description of conventional casting is that a smith tosses a few different metals into a vessel, heats them until they melt into a liquid and combine, and pours that liquid into a mold for cooling. Voilรก, a steel alloy.