S35VN & M390

For reference :

Nice chart, thanks

The only reputable Chinese companies that use “real” imported S35V and M390 steel are “Reate Knives” and “Kizer” knives. You won’t find these Chinese made knives on Aliexpress, you will, but they are $20 fakes. Chinese copies of Chinese originals. Yes, it seems they do eat their young.

So which specific alliexpress sellers sell original kevin john knives?

Another Chinese knife maker that might follow Reate and Kizer’s footsteps is Rike Knife.
They do use premium steels from M390 and S35VN and big knife stores like BladeHQ and Knifecenter are starting to sell some of their models.

They used to be available from Aliexpress but I think they know that to be taken seriously by knife collectors/users, selling their knives from Aliexpress might be diluting the brand name.

Not necessarily….I bought a CH 3507 with titanium scales and M390 Blade steel. It was 170.00 or so. Admittedly any big name knives claiming to be M390 under 100 dollars is almost certainly fake. M390 is even more premium steel than S35VN, and that was a very reasonable price for the quality of that knife.

There are alot of steels now. Last purchase of mine was made from Vanadis 4e nearly identical to cpm 4v I believe.

I wouldn’t buy any quality knife with such blade steel on AliExpress.
Stick to reputable sellers like bladehq.

I’m usually willing to experiment with < $50, but I’ve been burnt enough times in various places to go to someone with a known reputation for anything I expect quality from. Particularly when returns are not feasible. The SRMs were a good experience with relatively low risk.

I keep looking at fancier stuff (Kizer S35V my fanciest), but I’ll wait for a deal that I know is genuine on the next levels.

For off brand chinese knives I don’t spend more money on fancier steels Than D2… many years ago these brands jumped on the S35VN train because of the hype created by CR knives, and now the hype is all about M390, but they doesn’t appear to know about 20CV or 204P? Heat treat is a very delicate process and HRC doesn’t tell the whole story, however is all they have for marketing pitch.

I have tried bestech and civivi D2 and they give excellent sharpening results, but I would never spend $100+ on a green thorn or similar brand aliexpress knife no matter how good they claim to be.

I do have on order one of those super deal $65 Bestech titanium framelock S35VN folders from amazon, they show up from time to time but takes months to ship. I will compare it to spyderco S30V and S45VN to see how well it sharpens and how good is the edge retention.

CH brand knives had enough reviews and metal testing done to feel good about them. I have both a 3507 titanium with M390, and a CH 3002 titanium frame lock in S35VN…both still highly regarded. The rest of my Chinese brands consist of a crap load of Sanrenmu 910, both green and black, 9103, and 9104. Also a lot of 7010/710 varients. I also have maybe ten Ruike p801, and 108. The Ruike brand is sold by Fenix flashlight company but are made by Sanrenmu from most accounts. The 801 is like a higher priced 9103 with a flipper tab, and extra blue annodized hardware and slightly better 14c28n steel vs the 12c27 in the land. Those CH3002, and 3507 are extremely high quality, and have stood the test of time. The s35vn, and M390 hold an edge forever, but are not the easiest knives to sharpen. I have a crazy good KME sharpening system though, with all the bells and whistles. With patience and that expanded shrpener I can make my knives very scary sharp. I usually just use the Ken Onion Worksharp belt for cheap knives…not on 100 dollar plus knives though…they only see the KME sharpener. Will not wear out the diamond stones sharpening 10 dollar knives all the time. I have used the KME on a couple of the Land 9104, but that is it. I don’t have to sharpen the CH knives often, but do use them.

AliExpress is just a big open marketplace. Like the street bazaars of old, there are good sellers and bad. There are good brands and bad. Reputation matters and this can keep me away from unknowns. I’m a big fan of the work being done by LuvThemKnives and others to actually test some of the lesser known brands. We’ve seen bad brands like Eafengrow and Fura exposed. Meanwhile, we’ve gotten confirmation on some cool up-and-comers like Petrified Fish.

The stakes are higher for premium knives but the same principles apply. For instance, I’d have no qualms about purchasing from Kizer’s AliExpress store.

By the way…those CH knives are probably the smoothest flippers I have ever used…even better than my Ruike 801’s…and the Ruike is very smooth, especially for a 30 dollar knife. I use the Ruike p801, and Sanrenmu Land 9104 black stonewashed more than any other knives. I will not use the CH knives to cut up cardboard. They are just too nice to use as an everyday carry. The Spyderco and Benchmade knives I have, are in my opinion way overpriced. I have a few of each, but none of them were worth the cost to me. One of my benchmade auto has a broken spring, and the warranty requires sending the knife back for repair, instead of just sending me a spring. Even before it broke, it was not that great in my book. When I bought my Sanrenmu Land 910+ and 9103, 9104’s, they were all then under 10 bucks. I have mistreated those knives, but have yet to break one. I love the looks and performance of the 9104 black stonewashed version. In my opinion, the best knives I ever bought for the money. 12c27 is decent steel, and it runs on bearings…for under 10 bucks? Yeah I bought a lot of them. Gave a few to family and friends, but still have most of them, and now they are about 30 bucks usually.

also “CRKT” and “WE Knives” use the real imported super steels

It is fairly difficult for a knife maker to pass off a much cheaper steel as S35VN or M390 to a knife collector. I will likely know by how long it holds an edge. If not, I surely will first time I sharpen the blade. If the knife makers could make these cheaper steels perform like S35VN or M390, or even close to it, there would not be a need for this pricey steel. These super steels were created because the cheaper steels can’t be made to perform the same. It is not just the steel in a blade that matters though, it is also the heat treatment applied. If you put M390 in a knife, and it is not heat treated properly, it can still not perform. That has never been more true than with 440C steel. If properly handled 440C can approach the performance of super steels. If not, much cheaper steel can outperform it. The treatment on 440C is harder to work with than many steels, and smaller knife makers do not have the equipment to properly treat it. Supposedly 440C can not be used in an open air forge successfully, and once hardened you can’t remove imperfections or correct flaws. There is a great deal of variation on the quality of blades made from 440C due to how it must be treated to get it right. If you can do it right, it is an exceptionally good blade steel. In any case, it is amazing how many get knives made of super steels, and yet use more antiquated sharpeners. You need a very good sharpening system, and a lot of patience to get a really good edge, but it will maintain that edge a long time once you do. S35VN is not too bad, but M390 is about as hard to sharpen as I care to have. D2 is also fairly hard to sharpen. ZDP-189, S90 and S110…nope, I will pass on trying to sharpen those. The S35VN and D2 are probably the best balance of edge retention and ease of sharpening. There is a reason you see so many knives with those 2 steels. If you insist on going for S110, do not use a sharpening tool that allows you to screw up the profile…you do not want to have to re-profile those blades. Try to not use the more aggressive metal removal stones. It will be hard to polish any deeper cut grooves out. For me, life is too short for me to mess with a knife that is that hard to sharpen. I actually like 14c28n for most uses, it is not great at edge retention, but not horrible either. A few passes on the Spyderco Sharpmaker with the finest rods, followed by leather stropping, will bring it back to a razor edge. Same goes for 12c27.

LuvThemKnives on YouTube is constantly test the Rockwell hardness and if the advertised steel is what they say it is for different Chinese knife makers. There is also a reference table of all the test performed.

I actually have experience using a rockwell hardness gauge myself when in a mechanical engineering classes. It will give you the rockwell hardness, but can’t identify the steel used. I would imagine a chemical analysis would be required. I tested my Benchmade McHenry marked as having 154CM steel. I am sure it was 154cm, but the hardness was lower than I expected. That knife still has the mark left by the gauge. To the best of my memory, it had a small needle like part on the gauge and hydraulic pressure was applied until the needle started moving into the metal when it would click and give the gauge reading. It would leave a very small mark. I do not know how you might test the actual metal, but would guess it might require filing and testing the shavings, but I am guessing. I know I have heard that Buck knives use of 440C with the heat treatment they used would usually result in higher rockwell hardness than other manufacturers could achieve from the same steel. In fact, I think I read they are getting 440C hardness from 420HC steel. I had a buck knife but it was lost or stolen.

They use XRF alloy analyzers like this one for detecting the composition of the metal.

Good info, thank you. I would bet that analyzer is not in the budget range of ordinary people. Such a specialized device would likely be produced in very small quantities. I would not be shocked to see a 20,000 dollar price tag on such a device. PS, after writing this I saw a used xrf alloy analyzer by a different brand used on ebay for 3900 dollars. I would say that is more than a casual collector will be enticed to spend. It is cool that such devices exist though. Even used, the near 4000 dollar price means it is out of my price range. If they were to create a device to very quickly put a polished mirror edge on a blade…that, I might be interested in. If after spending 2 hours trying to sharpen M390, or some other super steel, and it looks like the diamond infused sharpener is not removing any material, it is a good guess that it is truthful. I would not even waste my time trying to use any non diamond stones to cut that steel. The s110 is in need of someone more skillful than me to sharpen it. It is just too hard, both in Rockwell hardness and effort needed to sharpen it to interest me in having knives with these ridiculously hard to sharpen steels. M390 and D2 are about as hard as I wish to tackle. That is with a KME sharpening system capable of putting a scary sharp mirror edge on anything. It would do it even on those, but it still would not be easy.

I also wanted to say, it was the LuvThemKnives youtube channel that I saw the reviews of both of my CH knives. I think the channel actually linked to the CH store on Aliexpress, but I am not sure. One of the knives arrived fine, the other actually took forever and sent the wrong knife….a cheap piece of crap. I went through hell trying to get a refund, but finally gave up. Then, and I kid you not, over a year later a package came that I had no idea what it was or where it came from, and it was my knife…the right one. Where it hid for over a year is still a mystery. I refused to order anything through Aliexpress for 2 years at least. The seller had finally agreed to the refund, but Aliexpress never sent it. It was all ok after I received the right knife, but I no longer trusted their return policy. Both of the CH knives though, I love, and trust me, the light weight titanium and extreme hardness of the M390 steel verified the authenticity. Both were titanium scales, but 1 was M390, the other was S35VN. It appears that CH has since started making their knives from G10 scales an D2 steel to be a more budget knife. That was not the case then. Both knives are on bearings with crazy good actions. The M390 is model 3507 reviewed here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2B6ZMeRUiMg The other was the 3002 reviewed here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EK0-BnubRms&t=601s