Most knife damage doesn’t come from bad knives.
It comes from bad sharpening.
If you’re deciding where to take your knives, here are the most common red flags — and why they matter.
1. No clear explanation of the process
If a sharpener can’t clearly explain:
- How your knife will be sharpened
- What equipment is used
- How heat is controlled
that’s a problem.
Good sharpening isn’t secret.
Vague answers usually mean corners are being cut.
2. Old stone grinding wheels
Traditional stone wheels are still widely used — and widely misunderstood.
Common issues:
- Poor angle control
- High friction and heat buildup
- Wheels that are rarely dressed or true
Burned steel loses its ability to hold an edge.
Once that happens, the damage is permanent.
3. One-size-fits-all angles
Knives are not interchangeable.
Red flag phrases include:
- “We sharpen everything the same way”
- “This angle works for all knives”
Different knives require different approaches depending on:
- Steel
- Thickness
- Grind
- Intended use
Uniform angles are fast — not correct.
4. Pull-through sharpeners
Pull-through devices are designed for convenience, not longevity.
They tend to:
- Remove excessive steel
- Tear rather than cut the edge
- Create thick, short-lived bevels
They make knives feel sharp briefly, while quietly shortening their lifespan.
If a shop uses pull-through sharpeners, look elsewhere.
5. Guided systems and fixed-angle machines
Guided systems and fixed-angle machines promise consistency — but consistency is not the same as correctness.
These systems:
- Lock knives into a single angle
- Ignore distal taper
- Can’t adapt to complex edge shapes
Some knives are specifically designed not to be sharpened at a constant angle.
A good example is Wüsthof’s helical edge geometry, where the edge angle subtly changes along the length of the blade. Fixed-angle systems flatten that design and remove what makes the knife cut the way it does.
If a sharpener can’t adapt to the knife, the knife gets forced to adapt to the system — and that’s rarely good.
6. Bulk grinding with no ownership
Some sharpening operations are designed for volume, not care.
In these setups:
- Knives move quickly through a system
- Multiple operators repeat the same motion all day
- Speed is rewarded
- Individual knives are not evaluated
No one is thinking about your knife — they’re just processing it.
This isn’t malicious. It’s structural.
When sharpening is treated like bulk processing, outcomes become inconsistent. Geometry drifts. Heat builds. Steel disappears faster than it should.
Good sharpening requires attention, not just motion.
7. Heavy scratching on blade faces
Scratches along the sides of a knife aren’t cosmetic — they’re evidence of:
- Poor control
- Aggressive grinding
- Sloppy technique
Good sharpening preserves the blade as much as the edge.
How we approach sharpening
At Danforth Knife Sharpening:
- Every knife is evaluated individually
- Geometry and heat are controlled
- Steel removal is minimized
That’s how knives stay good for years — not just until the next meal.
Bottom line
A good sharpener doesn’t just make knives sharp.
They:
- Preserve steel
- Respect geometry
- Adapt to the knife
If you’re choosing a sharpener, ask questions.
The answers matter.
Not sure how your knives are being sharpened? Bring them in. We’ll explain the process clearly — and sharpen them in a way that respects the knife.