Chronovore
Gold Member
- Joined
- Aug 29, 2019
- Messages
- 11,237
With competition heating up in the "decent" budget knife category, Artisan is doing something interesting. They've unveiled a new and proprietary budget knife steel using powder metallurgy. It already looks like they'll be using it in their CJRB line with the upcoming Ria. They've got a fixed blade coming out soon too.
Here is the article from Knife News:
https://knifenews.com/artisan-creates-proprietary-powder-metallurgy-steel-for-budget-knives
I'm curious to find out more about this...
EDIT: I changed the thread title because we now know that this steel is not produced using powdered metallurgy. AR-RPM9 is apparently a spray form steel based on 9Cr18Mov. While that could be interesting on its own, hyping it as a PM steel and the deeper marketing debacle surrounding AR-RPM9 sucked any possible wind out of those sails.
It's too bad because 9Cr18Mov is already a decent (although underappreciated) budget steel. For instance, 9Cr18Mov holds a noticeably better edge than 8Cr13Mov and has much higher corrosion resistance at the cost of lower toughness. I've enjoyed the high corrosion resistance of both 9Cr18Mov and the similar Japanese Acuto 440 in messy environments for years now. Limited testing on AR-RPM9 shows improvements in toughness versus 9Cr18Mov and even higher corrosion resistance so that could have been a good thing had they not poisoned the well with this nonsense.
To make matters worse, limited but reasonably controlled cut-testing showed initial releases in AR-RPM9 to have less edge retention than regular 9Cr18Mov with a decent heat treatment from WE in their Civivi and Sencut knives. So whatever potential the steel had, they seemed to be adding insult to injury on the heat treatment. I've heard that Artisan has improved their heat treatment since then but with the subsequent marketing revelations; I have trouble caring.
Here is the article from Knife News:
https://knifenews.com/artisan-creates-proprietary-powder-metallurgy-steel-for-budget-knives
I'm curious to find out more about this...
EDIT: I changed the thread title because we now know that this steel is not produced using powdered metallurgy. AR-RPM9 is apparently a spray form steel based on 9Cr18Mov. While that could be interesting on its own, hyping it as a PM steel and the deeper marketing debacle surrounding AR-RPM9 sucked any possible wind out of those sails.
It's too bad because 9Cr18Mov is already a decent (although underappreciated) budget steel. For instance, 9Cr18Mov holds a noticeably better edge than 8Cr13Mov and has much higher corrosion resistance at the cost of lower toughness. I've enjoyed the high corrosion resistance of both 9Cr18Mov and the similar Japanese Acuto 440 in messy environments for years now. Limited testing on AR-RPM9 shows improvements in toughness versus 9Cr18Mov and even higher corrosion resistance so that could have been a good thing had they not poisoned the well with this nonsense.
To make matters worse, limited but reasonably controlled cut-testing showed initial releases in AR-RPM9 to have less edge retention than regular 9Cr18Mov with a decent heat treatment from WE in their Civivi and Sencut knives. So whatever potential the steel had, they seemed to be adding insult to injury on the heat treatment. I've heard that Artisan has improved their heat treatment since then but with the subsequent marketing revelations; I have trouble caring.
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