Are KAMIKOTO knives a SCAM?

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  • čas přidán 12. 05. 2022
  • Thank you to HelloFresh for sponsoring this video! Use code SHADIVERSITY16 for up to 16 FREE MEALS + 3 Surprise Gifts across 6 HelloFresh boxes plus free shipping at bit.ly/3emMpiN !
    Having seen many Kamikoto knives promotions, several of their claims raised red flags for me so I put them to the test!
    References used in this video:
    kamikoto.com/pages/about-kami...
    All about 420j2 steel
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    www.knifeguides.com/420j2-ste...
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @user-oc5mw3fe3x
    @user-oc5mw3fe3x Před 2 lety +15059

    As a Japanese I have never heard of this brand of knives. Quick Googling gives me a couple of Japanese blogs reporting that the company advertises only to the English‐speaking market, and that based on their direct inquiries they have individually found out that the knives are manufactured in Yanjiang, China using Japanese steel.
    The branding makes me suspicious from the get‐go for a couple of reasons, like how the name itself (“神箏”) is somewhat quirkily formed (not impossible but weird), and the fact that Honshū is usually not what you mention when you describe where something is from - it’s the largest main island with about 80% of Japanese people living on it, saying something is from Honshū reveals almost nothing. You at least have to specify which region of Honshū it’s from, like Tōhoku, Kansai or Chūgoku. With these clues I can at least tell that it’s not a “genuine, authentic” Japanese brand.

    • @InvalidationX145
      @InvalidationX145 Před 2 lety +1226

      This was the kind of comment I was looking for. Thanks for the insight - knowing that they only advertise to the English-speaking market, and not where they're allegedly based in, is one of the biggest red flags for me. If your product (in this case, knives) were actually good, you'd be selling to your local market first before going abroad, since there'd be nothing to hide.

    • @magicman3163
      @magicman3163 Před 2 lety +73

      @@InvalidationX145 Do you know where I can buy good cooking knives?

    • @reginaldscot165
      @reginaldscot165 Před 2 lety +477

      The moment I saw them advertised I knew they weren’t Japanese. My first thought before any research was “I bet they are made in China.” Something just didn’t feel right. I have worked with Japanese companies and the marketing and branding just didn’t feel right.

    • @flazzorb
      @flazzorb Před 2 lety +207

      @@magicman3163 My advice is if you have a chance, ask a professional chef near you, and remember to have your knife sharpened from time to time.

    • @funehui9930
      @funehui9930 Před 2 lety +3

      It is made by a China company pretend to be Japanese and was registered in Hong Kong.

  • @SirenSarichan
    @SirenSarichan Před rokem +8892

    Re-watching this after the big scandal surrounding established titles and realising the same shady company and people are behind this knife company... Shad you were definitely on to something.

    • @fraktaalimuoto
      @fraktaalimuoto Před rokem +154

      Same here.

    • @nangirb1
      @nangirb1 Před rokem +339

      he was ahead by 6 months XD

    • @railgun-2814
      @railgun-2814 Před rokem +287

      Found this on my recommended just now, seems like the algorithm is onto something

    • @prjndigo
      @prjndigo Před rokem +157

      Its _recycled_ Japanese steel at that

    • @alejandrolievano5573
      @alejandrolievano5573 Před rokem +54

      Hasn't shad done sponsorships from established titles? Maybe I'm wrong but for sure many of youtubers from the community of the sword on youtube have.

  • @sapphoculloden5215
    @sapphoculloden5215 Před rokem +748

    When I was a kid, my father sold woolen suits at a local market. They were a known brand (Fletcher Jones, although that won't mean anything to most people today) and he was selling them for a fraction of the normal price. They simply would not sell. Finally, my mum suggested raising the price to half of the price of the ones bought in stores. He was skeptical - if they weren't selling for $50, why would they sell for $75? Still, he raised the price ... and watched them walk out the door.

    • @Batmans_Pet_Goldfish
      @Batmans_Pet_Goldfish Před rokem +223

      If you sell something too cheaply, people get suspicious.

    • @sapphoculloden5215
      @sapphoculloden5215 Před rokem +117

      @@Batmans_Pet_Goldfish - We had a wholefood shop where we used to sell freshly made peanut butter. We carefully set our price to match the standard not-cheap brands (Kraft and Bega in Australia) and we got about a 100% markup. This was much more than we had on most other products we sold, as we generally aimed for 50% and beat the supermarket.
      We still had people tell us our peanut butter was too cheap.

    • @EmeraldHill-vo1cs
      @EmeraldHill-vo1cs Před rokem +6

      Well fj's are still in melbourne city and other locals.

    • @sapphoculloden5215
      @sapphoculloden5215 Před rokem +9

      @@EmeraldHill-vo1cs - I didn't know that!
      They were a big brand in Tassie back in the '70s and '80s.
      I've just looked them up, and I see they have an online presence still.

    • @jeffk5142
      @jeffk5142 Před rokem +27

      Martha Stewart started off selling pies. Nobody bought them for 5 bucks; after she increase the price, they sold like hot cakes.

  • @MahiMahi-yu5jo
    @MahiMahi-yu5jo Před rokem +214

    I remember my science teacher in school explaining how pressure works depending on surface areas it is applied to. To prove her point, she made a cardboard knife with a sharp point to cut potatoes. It helped me stop investing in expensive knives and instead invest in a whetstone

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Před rokem +15

      I use wetstone all the time. For stirring, cuting, slicing, paperweight.

    • @michasokoowski6651
      @michasokoowski6651 Před rokem +17

      In all honesty, good steel matters as well... more so you either can sharpen it quickly and have a very sharp knife, but you have to do it frequently or you can have a knife that needs rarely to be sharpened but it will take some time.
      So it's more of a preference type of thing.

    • @bafon867
      @bafon867 Před rokem +9

      A knife may make a cut in any material, but a whetstone may make a knife out of any material

    • @jac1207
      @jac1207 Před rokem +5

      There's good steel too, but at a certain point, it becomes very niche and you have diminishing returns. Of course, it does basically comes down to just how much effort you have to put into maintaining and resharpening the knife vs. a steel that can take environmental exposure longer or stay sharp longer in between a wipe-off and oil down or resharpening.

    • @jamesritter5922
      @jamesritter5922 Před 10 měsíci +2

      You were investing in expensive knives while in school?

  • @wokeislatinfordumdum6054
    @wokeislatinfordumdum6054 Před 2 lety +2272

    My mom always told me, "If you want 100% accurate info on any blade quality, ALWAYS get it from a nerdy white guy dressed like a knight." So true.

    • @hopsonkim4952
      @hopsonkim4952 Před 2 lety +162

      Well, to be fair, if you get it from a really COOL white guy dressed like a knight, he’s either an actor or a time traveler…

    • @wokeislatinfordumdum6054
      @wokeislatinfordumdum6054 Před 2 lety +31

      @@hopsonkim4952 fair point, fair point.

    • @wokeislatinfordumdum6054
      @wokeislatinfordumdum6054 Před 2 lety +51

      Also, shadiversity, just to specify, I meant the GOOD use of the term nerdy. Semi-nerdy. Just enough to trust your word, but not enough to try to shove you in a locker. Plus, I don't want to lose any limbs attempting to do so. I like my limbs. I use them daily! Well, except one of them. I like that one the most though!

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l Před 2 lety +11

      @@hopsonkim4952 Does Ramsay count as cool? He's a millionaire but buys 15 pound Tesco pans and supermarket knives. Never saw him use something super expensive outside of his restaurants.

    • @innocentbystander3317
      @innocentbystander3317 Před 2 lety +9

      @@hopsonkim4952
      But you can tell if he's a time-traveller by the smell.. Cleanliness was not as important then as it is now. If he isn't covered in siht, he's either an actor or the king. Monty Python fact-checked this as true.

  • @falsehero2001
    @falsehero2001 Před 2 lety +4313

    Shad: "I'm offended by Australian stereotypes"
    Also Shad: Telling us what's not a knife and what is a knife.

  • @Evil0tto
    @Evil0tto Před rokem +245

    I'm always suspicious of companies that absolutely flood content creators with sponsorships. As soon as the "titles" one became less common everyone immediately started pushing these knives.

    • @mad_max21
      @mad_max21 Před rokem +19

      I dunno what you're talking about. Raid: ExpressVPN Raycon is an absolutely great product and/or service.

    • @LabLab3029
      @LabLab3029 Před rokem +23

      Whats funny is kamikoto is produced be the people who made established titles, absolute scams all around

    • @MasterhpIke
      @MasterhpIke Před rokem +1

      except raid shadow legends

    • @risso097
      @risso097 Před rokem +12

      @@mad_max21 raycons are overpriced for what they are. most of the money went to the packaging than the product itself

    • @jaydoss9987
      @jaydoss9987 Před rokem +5

      @@risso097 and the marketing 😋

  • @bravo_cj
    @bravo_cj Před rokem +252

    This video actually shows how well-developed modern material science is. You can get a totally serviceable knife out of cheapest steel.

    • @richmondvand147
      @richmondvand147 Před rokem +16

      they tend to be crap after a few months though. Better steel and design means you can re-sharpen and have a more comfy user experience.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Před rokem +6

      @@richmondvand147 I have a set, a bit more than a month old. They hold an edge beautifully and hone to a fine edge with a steel. How old are yours?

    • @cheapbastard990
      @cheapbastard990 Před rokem +5

      If you want a knife that will seriously hold an edge, make it out of a steel file. It's high carbon and very hard. But the drawback is that it's brittle and also prone to rust.

    • @froginabucket7294
      @froginabucket7294 Před rokem +1

      @@cheapbastard990name checks out

    • @matchesburn
      @matchesburn Před 6 měsíci

      @@flagmichael
      "They hold an edge beautifully"
      Has the check from Kamikoto cleared since then?

  • @GaudiaCertaminisGaming
    @GaudiaCertaminisGaming Před 2 lety +3627

    Shad is clearing out the competition before launching his own knife range - Ruler Sharp. Suitable for carrots, gherkins and goblins.

    • @Jaechan13
      @Jaechan13 Před 2 lety +228

      You could say its the one knife range... to Rule them all. :D

    • @Weigazod
      @Weigazod Před 2 lety +83

      Shad must have put a special enchantment in the ruler knife to make it deal extra damage against vegetable.

    • @Ajidamal420
      @Ajidamal420 Před 2 lety +107

      The knife against which all others shall be measured.

    • @UnreasonableOpinions
      @UnreasonableOpinions Před 2 lety +117

      "Ruler sharp - for measured cuts"

    • @DarkDraconX1
      @DarkDraconX1 Před 2 lety +5

      Da hell is a carrot?

  • @Silver_Knight.
    @Silver_Knight. Před rokem +879

    With the recent stuff about the Established Titles being a scam, this video aged beautifully. Kamikoto is owned by the same company.

    • @timothystevenhoward
      @timothystevenhoward Před rokem +12

      Marketing firm products with inflated values, pumped up with the biggest social engineering team money can buy!

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před rokem +13

      If anything ET is less scammy. It is very obviously a novelty product, a souvenir without much of a purpose. These purport to be quality knives, for cutting stuff, but they are just garbage, easily beaten by a $10 knife.

    • @123keniakiki
      @123keniakiki Před rokem +5

      This aged well

    • @Pantsinabucket
      @Pantsinabucket Před rokem +2

      @@SianaGearzT is a pure scam, plain and simple. You’re paying $50-150 for a PDF, and the promise that *some* of the money will be donated to a charity that only charges $1 for a tree to be planted if you just donate to the charity directly, while ET is also claiming that the money goes towards protecting the woodlands it’s on, when they are already government protected. This only dates back to the 70s-80s when actual Scottish landowners on struggling estates would “sell” title to these souvenir plots and plant a tree (usually a commercial pine variety for later logging work), on the explicit idea that this was a gag gift and didn’t grant any peerage or real ownership. ET has broken all these basic principles and contributes no money to struggling Scottish landowners for it.
      These are just shitty knives being sold as expensive ones, which is a tale as old as time, quite literally the earliest records we have of complaints about a product are about low-quality copper being sold as high-quality copper.

    • @dragoneater2596
      @dragoneater2596 Před rokem +33

      @@SianaGearz except it's also similarly scummy in advertising since they advertise that people can use said 'titles' in legal documents. The novelty of donating to charity is a joke because in the end this is false advertising over the mask of charity which still earns them a profit without people being as critical about it which in my opinion is even worse than just promoting a straight out scam.

  • @jackking5567
    @jackking5567 Před rokem +225

    Blacksmith here.
    1/ The profile of a knife blade is what makes it suitable for certain uses. The potato cut test you did - the better cutting blade will have a thinner 'flatter' blade profile. Imagine it exaggerated and like a wedge attempting to widen a cut zone - the potato flesh will grip the blade.
    2/ Damascus steel blades are not tough. Damascus steel styles are a rough 'twist/mix' of different steels. The effect is highlighted using acid to erode into the mixes. Because of the blend, regardless of if one of the mixed steels in the Damascus is a hard one, there will also be soft steels on the cutting edge. The secret to a blade is a longitudinal mix of steels. The body made using a strong springy steel whilst the cutting edge is made using a really hard (but slightly flexible) steel. Those Damascus blades are nothing but 'bling'.
    There are indeed some awesome Japanese blade makers but that scamming company has created a bunch of shi**y blingy blades on the back of known good blade makers.
    My best knife? It cost 50p from Wilkinsons the supermarket. It's a short plastic handled kitchen knife. The blade is medium hard but the best bit is its profile - flat and goes through vegetables very easily.

    • @soappacket2342
      @soappacket2342 Před rokem +20

      and when it breaks or gets dull, it's cheap to replace!

    • @smokescreen2146
      @smokescreen2146 Před rokem +3

      I'd like to see this guy try to cut through tomato skin with super thin slices using these cheapo soft and/or German steel knives.
      No surprise these made in China Kamikotos can't cut or last with their 420J2 soft steels
      In saying that, expensive knives are still overpriced.

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před rokem

      There is “Damascus” steel and Damascus steel.
      Most of the western stuff is pattern welded crap. The original Arabic stuff was a naturally occurring molybdenum steel - and then the mine ran out.

    • @FuckYouYouFuck
      @FuckYouYouFuck Před rokem +8

      Knifemaker here; agree with you on 1/, mostly disagree with you on 2/.
      Damascus/pattern welded blades can be very tough, just as tough as a monosteel blade if they're well made. The cheap Pakistani made damascus knives are not tough because they're made from terrible materials and are poorly heat treated. Most western bladesmiths are using 15N20 and 1084 in their damascus, two steels with very similar cutting and toughness properties. As long as the smith forge welds cleanly he'll have a blade as strong and sharp as if it had been made from one solid piece of steel.
      If a bladesmith uses a soft metal like pure nickel or copper or unhardenable wrought iron or mild steel or 300 series stainless into their damascus it's usually as cladding for a san-mai or go-mai billet, in which case if the soft cladding layers make their way onto the edge it's a serious error.
      There is a trend among some makers of stainless damascus to combine AEBL with 302 stainless, which I don't agree with since 302 is barely hardenable. On the other hand, Swedish Damasteel TM stainless damascus is made from PMRWL34 and PMC27 which are both good hardenable steels, though RWL34 has a deal more wear resistance than the PMC27.
      The higher-end Japanese knives are commonly made from Takefu's laminated steel, which has cladding of relatively soft 300 or 400 series stainless, and a very hard core of high quality steel like VG10 or SG2.

    • @Gustav_der_III
      @Gustav_der_III Před rokem

      @@FuckYouYouFuck non english nativ engineer here.
      I don't get you point. The effect of damast is that hard, brittle steel is embedded in a soft matrix so it won't break.
      you say western bladesmith use two steel with similar properties. what's the point of making the mix accept fancy optics?
      Why you should harden damast, the soft matrix is crucial or is just 1 steel get hardend?
      In my perpective a proper heat treated monoblock (small grain structure, embedded carbide and martensit) is superior to a damast steel mix. I would be thankful for you explaination.
      High alloy steels/stainless are another beast I'm not really into

  • @nixthelapin9869
    @nixthelapin9869 Před rokem +100

    Something that was immediately sus to me about kamikoto was how the knives were advertised as taking a 19-step process and being “individually inspected” before being sent out. It makes sense for real high quality brands, but weird for a brand willing to give a sponsorship to random CZcamsrs. Like there are certain kinds of brands, like expert artisans and craftsmans, you’d never see on a sponsorship unless maybe it was related to a channel that was targeted toward that industry and the person also had some level of knowledge about it and would advertise it to an audience that also knows about it well. Maybe I’m wrong in my reasoning, but the phrasing just felt off to me

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před rokem +15

      To me it was how vague their marketing buzzwords were what made me suspicious. "19 step process", "traditional Japanese techniques", like what kind of process, which exact techniques? If they were so great, wouldn't they have some kind of name that one could actually research and verify whether it has any bearing on quality?
      I'm used to that from the home electronics branch: premium brands like to exaggerate the effect of materials and technologies they used/employed in the product, cheaper but still decent brands tand to make up their own fancy terms for the same basic stuff that everyone does, but only the really cheap and shoddy crap doesn't bother throwing (made up) names at you and just tells you "supreme quality", "x times better than y" and all that shit that sounds good, but is so vague that you can't double check it.

  • @carius989
    @carius989 Před rokem +985

    Shad: Gets sponsorship offer from low quality knife company
    Also shad: "And i took that personally"

    • @alexl6644
      @alexl6644 Před rokem +9

      I want to like your comment, but it's sitting comfortably at 666 likes, and I don't want to break the magic.

    • @rarelycold6618
      @rarelycold6618 Před rokem +3

      @@alexl6644 feel free to like it now

    • @alexl6644
      @alexl6644 Před rokem +3

      @@rarelycold6618 Done.

  • @Maddog3060
    @Maddog3060 Před 2 lety +1663

    Advertisers take note: Try to get Shad to shill your shoddy product, and not only will he refuse, but he'll make a video exposing you while simultaneously using the ad for his actual sponsor to help humiliate you.
    A better way of telling ripoff companies to leave you alone, I cannot currently conceive.

    • @RobFeldkamp
      @RobFeldkamp Před 2 lety +19

      Do not forget, there is no such thing as bad publicity.

    • @Aaroncarter95
      @Aaroncarter95 Před 2 lety +40

      A whole new level of bm. Not only will he mock you while you're down but humiliate you by thinking you'll get back up before knocking you back down and finishing you off with a friend.

    • @kingbertie
      @kingbertie Před 2 lety +66

      @@RobFeldkamp I think you'll find there is, and the only people who believe that bad publicity is good are reality TV 'stars'.

    • @Xenohart237
      @Xenohart237 Před 2 lety +12

      except hello fresh has been exposed for giving people absolute tat as produce and shitty budget meat cuts you could buy yourself for half the price, calling out a scam while promoting a scam pretty funny

    • @sailormatlac9114
      @sailormatlac9114 Před 2 lety +17

      @@Xenohart237 I have a rule that if a company needs to sponsor YT channels and others things like that, instead of using normal means, it's a good indication it's a scam.

  • @peterd788
    @peterd788 Před rokem +75

    The reason why that grade of steel is used in surgical instruments is that in the developed world most surgical blades and bores are now single-use. The move to that began in the UK after the CJD outbreak around BSE in the 1990s. Even $7,000 skull bore bits are single use nowadays. As long as the steel quality is good for single use that’s all that matters.

  • @DjDolHaus86
    @DjDolHaus86 Před rokem +78

    I remember seeing "Sheffield Steel" on a knife blade and saying to my Grandfather "Must be a good bit of metal" because he lived in the area and worked in the business when he was younger. He told me it didn't mean anything, Sheffield was top dog in terms of steel quality at a point in history but he said that where he worked they produced everything from meticulously tested and graded steels to stuff that you wouldn't trust to sink if you threw it in a lake. He also said there were multiple foundries in the city and they varied wildly in production quality so the term was just branding to fool people who didn't know any better.

    • @J.DeLaPoer
      @J.DeLaPoer Před rokem +12

      As a knife and sword collector, mostly antiques, I'll agree completely. This also applies to "Solingen" and "Toledo" stamps: Historically they were known for having top quality steel and/or blade quality, but haven't been relevant since at least the 19th century. In their proper era these are legit markers of quality. Just not on anything modern.

    • @babagandu
      @babagandu Před rokem

      Just like "hand made"

    • @Chevsilverado
      @Chevsilverado Před rokem +2

      @@babagandu Machines are a hell of a lot more accurate than a person 😂

    • @thatcopenguy
      @thatcopenguy Před rokem +4

      Also, saying the steel came from Honshu, Japan is about as helpful as saying the Ford Mustang was assembled in mainland USA.
      It's literally the largest part of the country 😂

  • @fudgerounds91
    @fudgerounds91 Před rokem +1789

    When you mentioned that 420j steel is used in surgical instruments, I immediately said that edge retention is one quality that doesn't matter on surgical instruments. If you watch a surgeon, even on a minor surgery, that blade will probably be replaced several times, just to maintain a sterile environment. Edge retention is about the last thing on the mind of surgeons, because they replace the blades frequently.

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 Před rokem +129

      That combined with one of the best steels for corrosion resistant, which only really matters if you don't maintain (or don't want to maintain) the steel in the first place. (and unless its really bad for the steel which nobody would make knives with anyway, that factor is irrelevant for food-prep knives) The only reason you'd do that is if you made a bunch of them and kept them in storage for a long time and didn't want to have warehouse oversight for all of the steel..

    • @Smart-Towel-RG-400
      @Smart-Towel-RG-400 Před rokem +81

      Very true it's basically disposable razor steal

    • @danielmacdougall2697
      @danielmacdougall2697 Před rokem +18

      exactly, anything that cuts is disposable, just like syringes and needles.

    • @alexguskov25
      @alexguskov25 Před rokem +28

      Surgical stainless steel is mainly rust prevention, I've got cutco my knives both the serated and straight edge both hold there sharp edge, it's actually great when knives include a sand stone means they know all straight edge will need to be sharpened.
      That said those fake Japanese knives never appealed to me.

    • @independentaquaman7424
      @independentaquaman7424 Před rokem +7

      @@alexguskov25 Technically the Cutco "serated" knives are "Double D edge".
      I know because I used to sell them. LOL

  • @greatestcait
    @greatestcait Před 2 lety +2084

    Most likely: yes, they are a scam. Mystery steel with no comment about where it's made (Japanese knife makers tend to be very proud, and almost always tell you what kind of steel their knives are made from and the city they're made in) makes me believe that they're not being entirely honest about the quality and origin of these knives. Reminds me of how MVMT watches are just bottom of the barrel Chinese watches with a fancy logo slapped on after the fact.

    • @soulknife20
      @soulknife20 Před 2 lety +179

      Wait. They don't tell you the type of steel? That's ridiculous. You should always know the type of steel in a knife.

    • @DerAlleinTiger
      @DerAlleinTiger Před 2 lety +292

      What always put me off, besides that, was how they always boasted that each knife "takes *yeeeears* to make!" That doesn't make the knife better, it just means you must suck at making knives. Steel isn't like wine. It doesn't just get finer and sharper with age. You either make it strong and sharp or you don't, and there's no reason steel of this size should take years to make.

    • @user-bs9hq2xw3g
      @user-bs9hq2xw3g Před 2 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/1k5y-nlLxeY/video.html Finally it's here.

    • @Bear-Knight
      @Bear-Knight Před 2 lety +51

      Glad i didn't jump on a MVMT watch. Ended up getting the miltary grade Samsung smart watch. Wear it everyday installing glass & windows. I wear it working out and when i delivered car batteries, rotors and tires too. I did buy a glass/composite screen cover and it saved my watch from a direct hit with my seat belt buckle that broke the screen protector but not the watch.

    • @roguegen5536
      @roguegen5536 Před 2 lety +95

      Same with US knife makers. I've never met one that didn't tell me what the steel was or combo of steels since US knife makers love Damascus patterns.

  • @Athkore
    @Athkore Před rokem +67

    The only thing this was missing was a comparison to a verifiable high-quality knife. But the fact that the Kamikoto is comparable to a free knife in any capacity is very worrying.
    Ironically, this was a fantastic advertisement for the free MasterCheff knife, if I could get them where I lived I would.

    • @littleloner1159
      @littleloner1159 Před rokem +1

      Just get a cheap knife with the same steel
      Sure edge geometry and other factors will influence handling, but everyone has different preferences when it comes to that and it's not like you'll waste alot of money if you buy two different ones for like 20 bucks in total

  • @ventarfield7115
    @ventarfield7115 Před rokem +36

    I don't know but as an official Lord of Scotland who has a star named after him I can afford all the Kamikoto knives I want.

  • @SundayMatinee
    @SundayMatinee Před rokem +1437

    Wow 6 months ago and people are still taking them as sponsors. Thank you for investigating this and exposing these frauds.

    • @chaost4544
      @chaost4544 Před rokem +78

      This video has aged very well.

    • @thatmanatite
      @thatmanatite Před rokem +18

      Got into my recommended all this time later

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy Před rokem +6

      When this is your only income and the offer is $20k for the month, why not?

    • @thatmanatite
      @thatmanatite Před rokem +44

      @@GameTimeWhy It’s because misleading your viewers and by extent giving your viewers’ money to scammers is (for one) bad for your reputation, conscience and happiness amongst viewership, and (for another) allows for further scammer investment to propagate the cycle of them gaining money by deceiving individuals through lying in marketing material

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy Před rokem +4

      @@thatmanatite the viewers tend to be self righteous pricks. First it was raid shadow legends then it was click bait "getting worse" then shorts. It's the platform. Don't like it then start supporting creators on patreon so they don't need to get sponsors.

  • @vodostar9134
    @vodostar9134 Před 2 lety +798

    Thanks for an honest take on this instead just taking the sponsor money and running. Your sponsors should thank you too, because this definitely increases their perceived authenticity since we know you're not a scammer.

    • @l0rf
      @l0rf Před 2 lety +52

      True, this is basically raising his own market value. While it probably makes him highly unattractive to sponsors that will shill out a ton of money for a sub-par product (because all the budget goes into marketing), the actually decent products looking for a promo will stick with people like Shad.

    • @Crusader1245
      @Crusader1245 Před 2 lety +13

      Yeah risking of getting blacklisted by one sponsor in this case probably is worth it, unless they pay exceptionally well. Still yeah, I appreciate honesty even if sponsor gave them truckload of money (we don't really know, people don't tend to disclose how much they got). Edit: It doesn't seem like Kamikoto sponsored this video, so now I'm confused what sponsor money he could run with, as it doesn't reflect negatively to his other sponsors anyway.

    • @bus3957
      @bus3957 Před 2 lety +25

      @@Crusader1245 Op was saying that he chose to do this video instead of accepting the sponsorship and promoting a subpar product. Which shows that the sponsorships he does have are products he genuinely thinks are good

    • @justinlast2lastharder749
      @justinlast2lastharder749 Před 2 lety +8

      @@Crusader1245 When you go after a Company for their products, other companies tend to steer clear just in case they get the same treatment from you. Companies also use Advertising Companies, so the one actually sponsoring you has multiple products they control advertising for...and you just fucked them on one. Think they will come back with a different one? Nope, just lost everything that advertising company is involved with. This is why certain CZcamsrs all have the same sponsorships...because they work with the same advertising company.

    • @nathanc939
      @nathanc939 Před 2 lety +10

      @@justinlast2lastharder749 I am not sure Shad needs more sponsors. He already has a few good ones, some of which, he was hand picked for as well. Those are very unlikely to drop him for that, actually, it shines a good light on their product. I do agree for new sponsors though, some my be scared, others, those wo believe in their product might still be attracted in some cases.
      Yes most sponsoships are run bu agencies, not the companies, so that part very much hold.

  • @izelennkhan1887
    @izelennkhan1887 Před rokem +53

    Ah yes, the incredible surgical knife. The one you use exactly ONCE and then throw away. Amazing.

  • @xjesusxchristx
    @xjesusxchristx Před rokem +52

    I'm a chef, and one of my favourite knives is a cleaver I got at a Canadian dollar store, for five dollars. I bought it as a junk cleaver, and it ended up in my professional knife roll, beside knives that cost me hundreds of dollars/pounds(I'm dual, so just depends where I was when I purchased a given knife). I don't even use it as much of a cleaver, rather I use it as a chef's knife(like Chinese cleaver style chef's knives).
    Incidentally, another favourite is a spring-steel knife I made from an old lorry suspension, when I was 15 years old. It's has a no frills rough wooden handle(I wrap it sometimes), but is a damn good knife.

    • @gearjammergamer8560
      @gearjammergamer8560 Před rokem +6

      Many times when cheap steel is used in manufacturing it can vary widely in hardness. My guess is you hit the jackpot and got one of a really nice hardness.

    • @xjesusxchristx
      @xjesusxchristx Před rokem +8

      @@gearjammergamer8560 Luck of the draw was definately part of it - dad has a rockwell tester.. I should have him check it out, for curiosity's sake.

  • @dividing0
    @dividing0 Před rokem +1912

    My main takeaway from this is that I kinda want that Masterchef knife

    • @kylielinae
      @kylielinae Před rokem +52

      Exactly how I feel.

    • @donc9275
      @donc9275 Před rokem +80

      I’m super happy with those crappy plastic white handled knives you get for under $30 at costco

    • @joik2ww269
      @joik2ww269 Před rokem +19

      @@donc9275 I make from bandsaw blade :D grind to shape and glue and rivet handle in place. Took less than hour to make and works year or two :D Flexes bit too much but its ok for less than dollar manufacturing price.

    • @computername
      @computername Před rokem +59

      Here's a little wisdom the corporate knife world doesen't talk about: The secret to sharp knifes in the kitchen long term isn't what product to buy, but our habits. Learning to sharpen is one aspect of it, but much more importantly (and much more difficult) to find a routine that works for each person to keep that blade sharp in use. Again, it's not about what sharpening device to buy, it's about the commitment to develop a routine that can be sustained. Most people won't develop or stick to such a habit and end up with dull blades. In that case, it's a complete waste to purchase "nice" knifes.. as they'll only end up as blunt and not being used to their potential. Knifes and steels are fascinating, and the qualities of each material, style and manufacturing are wildly different. However, all of these have surprisingly little to do with how sharp knifes will be in your kitchen, every time you pick it up, long term.
      The irony that humans are notriously bad at good habits and that's what stands between us and happiness. Commercialism tries to lure us in with the perception that we could buy our way to happiness on a shortcut.

    • @Raymo2u
      @Raymo2u Před rokem +6

      I have the 900pts knife from Price Chopper, its better than some of the knives Ive spent $50-$100 on. I couldnt imagine buying $200+ knives, I just done see the point.

  • @tylerdavis6389
    @tylerdavis6389 Před 2 lety +827

    I actually had the steel grading argument back when I sold knives.
    I had three German tourists turn their nose up at me and try to get superior because I didn't have any "German steel".
    I basically explained to them the grading codes and such and how it being German didn't effect the quality in the least.
    They weren't happy.

    • @8Dataman8
      @8Dataman8 Před 2 lety +72

      Funny thing about that, the pencil sharpeners that I own that say "made in Germany" seem to sharpen the best. I wouldn't make a huge argument about it though.

    • @jackwriter1908
      @jackwriter1908 Před 2 lety

      It's not really that important and if it were actual german tourists they were just assholes or idiots. When I buy something on a trip then I most of the time don't even know if I can cut with it. I am on Vacation, that looks cool, let's buy it 😂
      Maybe they were such idiots, because we have this whole _Made in Germany_ thing... Most cheap things were import with tags like _Made in China_ and all that stuff and in the result often things are advertised as good quality since it was made in Germany...

    • @uglystupidloser
      @uglystupidloser Před 2 lety

      german cars are better, german steel is better, german air is better.
      even their 💩 is better. these are facts.

    • @dragoneye6229
      @dragoneye6229 Před 2 lety +46

      The only German steel I would ever want is Krupp. "Harder than Krupp steel!".

    • @HeavyTanker-vx4oq
      @HeavyTanker-vx4oq Před 2 lety +24

      Late ww2 German tanks doubt the hard Krupp steel argument. They were KNOWN for just having useless low quality steel.

  • @anklemonitor
    @anklemonitor Před rokem +31

    It's so strange to me that legitimate brands don't sponsor CZcamsrs more often, considering how well it seems to work for crap-quality products (Manscaped, Raycon, All Mobile Games, etc...)

    • @changsiah2
      @changsiah2 Před rokem +11

      Yeah they spent more time basically making the quality products rather than do a lot of marketing

    • @BobfromSydney
      @BobfromSydney Před rokem +17

      Risk Management. Remember Subway Jared? If a big brand ties themselves to an influencer and the influencer does something stupid or bad they then get negative publicity associated with their brand. It's not worth it for these companies to use this form of advertising in many cases.

    • @changsiah2
      @changsiah2 Před rokem +3

      @@BobfromSydney yeah I can honestly see why legitimate companies these days don't really use CZcams sponsorships although Subway nowadays as fix up their reputation and been doing pretty well nowadays even thoug mentions of that guy ( anyways I can see the reason why)
      although nowadays if I were to go for a modern-day equivalent of that guy and a much better version of him is Milad Mirg although he's more of an employee there but at least he feels like it Him minus the negative stuff
      that is all

    • @captaincory4358
      @captaincory4358 Před rokem +2

      Raycon is a "crap quality product"? That's news to me. I've been using their products for well over a year and I'm continually impressed by them. Especially when you drop them on to a concrete warehouse floor from 30+ feet in the air and you just pick them up and keep on using them like nothing happened.

    • @helmeren3828
      @helmeren3828 Před rokem +4

      @@captaincory4358 how much did you get paid?

  • @hyfy-tr2jy
    @hyfy-tr2jy Před rokem +13

    I have had these Kamikoto knives in hand right next to a set of knives i bought from Aldi....the Aldi knives were $7 for a chef knife, $7 for a carving knife and $7 for a paring AND utility knife....and side by side they were the exact same quality, build and handle shape. I swear they came from the same manufacturer

    • @EbonyPope
      @EbonyPope Před rokem +3

      It's the same with guitars. Although guitars coming from China and Indonesia these days can be really good quality (Epiphones and Harley Bentons are excellent for their price). However a lot of manufacturers build their guitars in the same factory and just put a different headstock on which in turn justifies a 500% markup if it's an established brand.

    • @CyberChrist
      @CyberChrist Před 8 měsíci

      Chinese factories frequently sell the same products known brands make them manufactuer under their own name, or another one's.

  • @LadyBirdieBop
    @LadyBirdieBop Před 2 lety +735

    The very idea that Kamikoto sees Shad and thinks, “A sword guy! Knives are just mini swords! This is the PERFECT sponsorship opportunity!!!!!!!”
    Mistakes were made. I’m crying. 😂

    • @Dragonmoon98
      @Dragonmoon98 Před 2 lety +84

      Ever seen that meme of a guy riding a bike and sticking a stick between the spokes and screaming when he flips over? That's how bad Kamikoto shot themselves in the foot thinking Shad would just take the sponsorship because "Derp durdur, sword guy!"

    • @ChromePyramid
      @ChromePyramid Před 2 lety +60

      They saw one katana and thought "Yep this guy's a weeb let's make him push our overpriced product"

    • @gamingmoyai3950
      @gamingmoyai3950 Před 2 lety +30

      @@ChromePyramid at this point they’ll have to give these things away for free after you buy a certain amount of stuff at the supermarket.

    • @NathanCassidy721
      @NathanCassidy721 Před 2 lety +10

      To be fair, this kind of sponsorship is the most appropriate for a channel like this.
      It’s that Scottish Established Titles sponsor that I would find sketchy.

    • @mewmeister8650
      @mewmeister8650 Před 2 lety +16

      ​@@NathanCassidy721 As far as I can tell, Established TItles is a scam site copied off of the real organization Highland Titles and it's sister Celtic Titles, which are pretty upfront that the title part is more a silly gag than a real title. They don't even seem to have a presence in Scotland. To be clear, Souvenir plots can't be registered in Scotland and the Court of Lyon does not recognize ownership of them to grant titles. This means that companies like Established Titles can sell the same plot multiple times. (Edit: This isn't to say that Highland Titles is completely legitimate or noble, their books are kept in the dark, but they do demonstrably own land in Ireland and do let you visit it.)

  • @jackmcslay
    @jackmcslay Před 2 lety +164

    Another reason surgical instruments use this steel: they're disposable so it doesn't really matter if they lose an edge quickly

    • @surferdude4487
      @surferdude4487 Před 2 lety +15

      That's right. Most "surgical steel" only has to cut once, then they throw it away. I could make instruments out of tin that would do for that purpose.

    • @jakethegreatest473
      @jakethegreatest473 Před 2 lety +1

      @@surferdude4487 hope it gets recycled lol

    • @sofiadragon6520
      @sofiadragon6520 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jakethegreatest473 "Disposable" in this case means single use before being remade. This eliminates the human error involved in cleaning because in that context even a small amount of cross contamination can be dire - a bit of rotting human is the worst case scenario. They litteraly kill it with fire.
      25:43 Shad himself mentions sharpening the surgical blades between each use. The edge is remade.

    • @voidseeker4394
      @voidseeker4394 Před 2 lety

      I actually have an old reusable scalpel stolen from surgery long time ago. I'm using it as X-acto knife for DIY. I must say it loses edge quite quickly and is hard to make as sharp as single-use x-acto and scalpels, but it is a lot less brittle.

    • @pumkin610
      @pumkin610 Před rokem

      Are these things just pilling up in landfills or being recycled?

  • @washedup_adventurer
    @washedup_adventurer Před rokem +33

    As someone who loves blades, I'm surprised you haven't gotten into the realm of nice kitchen knives. As a foodie and someone who loves to cook, I've had a lot of fun getting into entry-level carbon steel kitchen knives. Completely changed what I expect from sharpness and edge retention in the kitchen.

  • @crazypete3759
    @crazypete3759 Před rokem +17

    A friend of mine swore by his set of knives, I started to realize that he was regularly sharpening them after washing them.... I had a good laugh when he bought a new one it was quite a bit larger than the old one he only had for about 6 months, LOL! He sharpened them so much the knife was literally shaved down!

  • @Reason4234
    @Reason4234 Před 2 lety +401

    I'm a cook, so I can assure you, when you buy knives, it's better to just find a good knife you are comfortable with in weight and length in the $20 to $50 range and use a honing iron and a good sharpening stone.
    I've seen cooks buy expensive knives to find that they find them uncomfortable to hold. If you cannot hold the knife before you buy it, you don't buy it.

    • @liquidacid1983
      @liquidacid1983 Před 2 lety +37

      I've got piles of nice expensive cooking/table knife sets people have given me over the years. I still cook and eat with the beat-up Ka-Bar I got in the Corps decades ago instead. lol

    • @velazquezarmouries
      @velazquezarmouries Před 2 lety +16

      Well if you want a Japanese style knife i would recommend supporting a local smith Wich would give you a good knife at a reasonable price
      And you are also supporting local knifemakers in your community

    • @greenwolf2299
      @greenwolf2299 Před 2 lety

      I actually use my bush craft knife for cooking. the one knife is all i need and been doing work for over 20 years now :P

    • @fluttzkrieg4392
      @fluttzkrieg4392 Před 2 lety

      ​@@velazquezarmouries Can you really get a good hand-made knife for, say, $50 dollars?

    • @user-bs9hq2xw3g
      @user-bs9hq2xw3g Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/1k5y-nlLxeY/video.html Finally it's here.

  • @RobKinneySouthpaw
    @RobKinneySouthpaw Před 2 lety +601

    A note about surgical steel: The average scalpel will make one, up to less than a dozen cuts in its entire life.
    For patient and staff safety, a lot of scalpels and edged instruments are single-use. So corrosion resistance, stiffness, certain amount of resistance to snapping are all useful properties. But edge retention? Doesn't really come up.
    A lot of surgical instruments are clamps and various things not even edged items. Better made ones of these do get reused and sterilized. Not rusting or pitting is going to make that process better and safer. But the fact that surgical steel is suitable for making reusable hemostats has no bearing on whether it is good for knives.

    • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
      @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Před 2 lety +31

      Surgical steel is also always stainless steel, which isn't ideal for chef knives.

    • @witiwap86
      @witiwap86 Před 2 lety +40

      @@the_inquisitive_inquisitor Stainless doesn't always mean low quality. The 420 and 440 stainless are crap and when you just see "stainless" on the blade it will be one of these. There are actually some really good stainless steels they're just a lot more expensive.
      For example: D2 steel. It's not all that much more expensive but it holds an edge extremely well and is pretty corrosion resistant. It's not going to be marketed as "stainless" on its own but it's in the category of stainless steel because of its corrosion resistance. When I say not all that much more expensive it's kind of relative, though. It's probably at least 5 or 10 times more expensive but when your starting point is so low the actual cost isn't really that much higher.

    • @g00gleisgayerthanaids56
      @g00gleisgayerthanaids56 Před 2 lety +17

      Just buy a scalpel and use one... they dont cut very well at all. Ive used them when i was a medic, and just removing a single mole on a service members scalp (no bigger than a .177 cal bb) dulled it and required a minute or two of "sawing" in order to fully remove it. Had it been a legit surgery that required more precise cutting we either would have used a different tool or just multiple scalpels, tossing them as soon as it dulls.

    • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
      @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Před 2 lety +2

      @@witiwap86 I was thinking more in terms of *making* the knife, stainless steel is a total drama queen.

    • @marcogenovesi8570
      @marcogenovesi8570 Před 2 lety +50

      surgical steel is the knive's equivalent of "military grade". Meaningless marketing

  • @Tasytot
    @Tasytot Před rokem +12

    A neat comparison is that KAMIKOTO sells 4 knives there for over $300 made with super low-grade steel, while a different knife company such as TUO sell an entire 8-knife set for less than that (sometimes on sale for a little over $100) made with the higher-end X50Cr15MoV steel

    • @thatcopenguy
      @thatcopenguy Před rokem +2

      I hate that I actually know what X50CrMoV15 means 😂
      It's corrosion resistant due to sufficient Carbon and Chrome, no numbers after 15 means it has some, but not a lot of Mo and V, and from what I can recall those 2 elements can make good steel for industrial production processes. Professionals please correct my memory if I'm wrong..
      Sorry for the rant but it's probably better steel than whatever Kamikoto is using.

    • @Tasytot
      @Tasytot Před rokem +2

      @@thatcopenguy It is, I believe. The knives that use it aren't the greatest for holding their edge, but they're still really not bad at that and are pretty durable. I have a bunch that I use regularly. Definitely better for their price-point than Kamikoto's.

  • @evilgenius3646
    @evilgenius3646 Před rokem +19

    In regard to the sword test near the end, it seems like the "freebee" knife chipped where the Scamikoto knife rolled. Which would lead me to believe it is softer than the free knife.

    • @Megozelenka
      @Megozelenka Před rokem

      Yes, almost 0 carbon in kamikoto`s make for a softer steel, it will bend and tear, while higher carbon steel will chip and break.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Před rokem

      @@Megozelenka Have you had problems with your Kamikoto knives bending? Mine sure don't; they are the best knives I have owned. They take and hold a fine edge better than any other kitchen knives I have had in 50 years. Too many people talking about things they have never even seen in person.

    • @Megozelenka
      @Megozelenka Před rokem +7

      @@flagmichael my comment is based on video I just watched. You have dangerous amount of copium in your body. I only use knives that I made myself

    • @TheDaniel85
      @TheDaniel85 Před rokem +5

      Agreed, the 420J2 is prone to plastic deformation rather than chipping usually. A steel that has no business in a kitchen knife, garbage is what it is.

  • @fearlessgentleman
    @fearlessgentleman Před rokem +773

    I was a chef for many years and a knife collector. For me it's quite obvious that this knife is about as good as anything you can buy at target. I didn't know they were asking $300 for it though! What a rip off!

    • @jomangeee9180
      @jomangeee9180 Před rokem +16

      i am glad i saw this video before getting ripped off, but come on 50+ mins!! thats a rip off in itself

    • @zeke7515
      @zeke7515 Před rokem +14

      @@jomangeee9180 get Sponsorblock. They have a"highlight" feature where you can usually jump to the results. All user submitted.

    • @mikehousley757
      @mikehousley757 Před rokem +44

      I was given one 5 years ago as a gift, the person paid 600 for it at the time. I want a refund and it wasn't even my money.

    • @billy-joestanton2663
      @billy-joestanton2663 Před rokem +18

      its because they know their target market arent going to know anything about steel grades or knife quality really, so they put inflated prices and advertise through youtubers who will happily promote things for easy money regardless of any knowledge to the actual quality.

    • @CMCAdvanced
      @CMCAdvanced Před rokem +4

      @@jomangeee9180 FOR A THOUSAND YEARS I HAVE SLUMBERED TO AWAKEN AT THIS VERY MOMENT THAT YOU MIGHT SLANDER THE LONG AND MY WRATH SHALL BE UPON YOU!!!
      Praise the Don!

  • @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin
    @TheGhostOfFredZeppelin Před 2 lety +624

    The way Kamikoto describes their knives made me think of that old tweet where someone described their job as a cashier at McDonald's as "I'm responsible for handling the day to day financial transactions of a multi-billion dollar company" or something along those lines. Wordplay can be very powerful at times.

    • @Mr.Ekshin
      @Mr.Ekshin Před 2 lety +51

      I make knives and have a decent blade shop in my basement (forge, belt grinders, buffers, drill press, etch tank, etc, etc). I've had people ask me what kind of kitchen knives I made for myself. They're often confused when I tell them I use a $49 set of Farberware knives I bought at WalMart.
      One friend showed me his $500 set of Victorinox kitchen knives, and laughed when he found out I was using such a cheap set. So I started pulling his Victorinox blades out of the block to inspect them. They were almost all DULL as butter knives. I explained that he was welcome to dry shave the hair from his arm with ANY of the knives in my block. My knives likely will NOT hold an edge as long as his blades... but mine sharpen quickly, and I know how to maintain them at that level of sharpness.
      Lesson: Don't invest big money in your kitchen knives... invest in a good sharpener, or learn how to stone them.

    • @awesomestuff9715
      @awesomestuff9715 Před 2 lety +22

      @@Mr.Ekshin that's just sad, spending so much on knives and not sharpening it; i only really ever use a single knife; the mac mth-80, and i sharpen them myself regularly, to make sure it stays razor sharp. being able to sharpen knives yourself is definitely quite an important skill, and stones would definitely be the best option, and your friend should definitely get a cheap set, just to practice sharpening, since cheaper sets have softer steel, and will sharpen easier, and if you somehow ruin the knife, it's only a cheap knife
      well, you definitely already know this, and i'm only writing this for any other people that come across this comment
      tl;dr i agree with your opinion on being able to sharpen and maintaining your knives yourself
      also a different note, ceramic knives are horrible, there is no way to effectively sharpen them yourself; don't buy them

    • @samirSch
      @samirSch Před 2 lety +14

      Nothing wrong with a "little upgrade" in the curriculum, huh?
      "I'm a technician especialized in the maintenance of sanitary facilities in urban commercial centers" (bathroom cleaner at the mall).

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l Před 2 lety

      @@Mr.Ekshin Sad Swiss noises... grumble grumble still good Army knives lol...

    • @Mr.Ekshin
      @Mr.Ekshin Před 2 lety +10

      @@user-lv7ph7hs7l - Yup... it IS sad. I went over to a friend's house for dinner, and watched his wife using Wusthof blades. She was cutting food not on a cutting board, but on stoneware plates. And then she casually tossed hundreds of dollars worth of blades in the DISHWASHER.
      Those are literally the two things that will dull kitchen knives faster than anything. All of them were dull from constant mistreatment. It made me want to weep watching fine German steel treated like that.
      It was probably a thousand dollars worth of kitchen knives that they got from her uncle as a wedding gift, and they simply had no idea.

  • @GPismymom
    @GPismymom Před rokem +7

    You gave me the shock of my life. I got a really good Japanese knife for Christmas and my parents took a long time to check for real quality and when I saw the title of the video I thought mine was also made by Kamikoto but it wasn't. I really thought I "fell" for the scam only two weeks before you make this video

  • @kellycasperhanson4426
    @kellycasperhanson4426 Před rokem +116

    You were definitely ahead of the pack! Many months later, other YT channels are also exposing Kamikoto, along with Established Titles, as scams!
    👉 You're video is sooooo much more entertaining & educational than those others.
    Thank you!

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Před rokem +1

      I lost interest with his silly Renaissance Festival getup and the childish mugging. He lost all credibility with that.

    • @kellycasperhanson4426
      @kellycasperhanson4426 Před rokem

      @@flagmichael
      It was my first time ever viewing his channel.
      I suppose it's like the old saying, "Familiarity breeds contempt" or, maybe, "Too much of a good thing?"

    • @einundsiebenziger5488
      @einundsiebenziger5488 Před rokem

      Your* video (you're = you are).

  • @doraspoljar697
    @doraspoljar697 Před rokem +800

    I feel like the ruler knife deserved more screen time. I wanted to see how that fared compared to other knives

  • @snowfox4277
    @snowfox4277 Před rokem +274

    You were WAY ahead of the curve with this one. You were so close to exposing the whole scam system

  • @ginagruber1732
    @ginagruber1732 Před rokem +6

    This video is great not just for the Kamikoto issue, but your education on steel types is good to know information. Never knew this before.

  • @Musikur
    @Musikur Před rokem +5

    Fascinating video, appreciate the effort which went into researching this. For a more direct test of the steel vs steel, I would recommend using the sword on the back of the knives as you already noted they are both pretty much an identical 2mm width and are presumably flat, making this a more 1 to 1 comparison than the cutting edge.

  • @harrygenderson6847
    @harrygenderson6847 Před 2 lety +564

    Side note on grades of steel used in surgical instruments: corrosion resistance is important, as you mentioned, but edge retention is not a concern at all. Why not? Because implements such as scalpel blades are made to be *disposable*. That way, the implements being used on you have never touched another human being. They are sterile and reliably sharp for a low number of cuts.

    • @taavileppik7809
      @taavileppik7809 Před 2 lety +56

      Wanted to say the same thing that the scalpel blades are just thrown away after minimal amount of use. All they care is that the blade is sharp out-of-the-box and it's clean.

    • @lordtachanka463
      @lordtachanka463 Před 2 lety +23

      True but for a cutting knife….. edge retention and quality steel is better

    • @imperfectlump6070
      @imperfectlump6070 Před 2 lety +32

      They use an autoclave to sterilize them after use. As to sharpening I am unsure. My wife was a medical assistant.

    • @russellperry9902
      @russellperry9902 Před 2 lety +14

      @@imperfectlump6070 shhhh stop dropping truth bombs

    • @cyberleaderandy1
      @cyberleaderandy1 Před 2 lety +15

      @@imperfectlump6070 old fashioned scalpels were sharpened on a stone or strop ( like a cut throat razor) then autoclaved.

  • @luthfihar3211
    @luthfihar3211 Před rokem +948

    kamikoto is in the family company that included established titles, so it's not a big surprise the knifes are more of a marketing trick rather than a real product

    • @NowhereBeats
      @NowhereBeats Před rokem +63

      Whenever I hear of these scams I always worry they are from my home, Hong Kong.
      And indeed they are.
      Any company that does business in the west and is registered in Hong Kong, but does not seem to do business in China or Hong Kong, is automatically super untrustworthy in my eyes. So many scam companies hide here.
      Not just western ones, but loads of indian and arab ones too.

    • @luthfihar3211
      @luthfihar3211 Před rokem +21

      @@NowhereBeats it's a tax haven, it's also far away and is under the cover of the PRC so any investigations would be quite hard so it's quite the juicy spot to set up a shady business

    • @omeramrani2274
      @omeramrani2274 Před rokem +1

      Nobody but me noticed how he bend the adge of the paper on the second try with the Japanese knife?

    • @titanium4167
      @titanium4167 Před rokem +15

      @@omeramrani2274 They are not even real Japanese knives

    • @omeramrani2274
      @omeramrani2274 Před rokem

      @@titanium4167 lol

  • @marissabulso6439
    @marissabulso6439 Před rokem +5

    It’s been a good while since I’ve peered back into Shadiversity. One, I had forgotten how enjoyable your content is. And two, I absolutely love the chain mail hoodie. That is too cool!

  • @atigerclaw
    @atigerclaw Před rokem +36

    Shad should start his own knife company:
    *Meter Cleavers!*
    _Quality blades that measure up to the task._
    (WARNING: Knives are in fact, sharp, and may cut you if mishandled. Meter Cleavers assumes no responsibility for using our knives as actual measuring tools.)

  • @SquareViking
    @SquareViking Před rokem +2005

    It feels terrible knowing how many legitimately entertaining and well-meaning content creators Galton Voysey (owners of Establiahed Titles and Kamikoto) managed to lure in.
    I'm glad more CZcamsrs are catching on to them.

    • @rustumlaattoe
      @rustumlaattoe Před rokem +79

      Legal Eagle just did a video on how Established Titles is a scam.

    • @FrankYammy
      @FrankYammy Před rokem +31

      Feels terrible knowing youtubers are money driven? Wild

    • @Ryan-wx1bi
      @Ryan-wx1bi Před rokem +77

      Or should it feel more terrible that they just partner with companies without ever researching?

    • @FrankYammy
      @FrankYammy Před rokem

      @@rustumlaattoe prove it

    • @SquareViking
      @SquareViking Před rokem +93

      @@FrankYammy no. Feels terrible that GOOD CZcamsrs who TRY to get sponsorships that are legitimate get roped into scams like these regardless. There's a different, you know. Call them naive, stupid or sloppy, but some people accept deals in good faith.

  • @manolgeorgiev9664
    @manolgeorgiev9664 Před 2 lety +116

    Kamikoto: If you buy this ridiculously overpriced knife, you also get a whetstone to sharpen it with.
    Shad: Ok, but can I just buy the whetstone?

    • @nikkan3810
      @nikkan3810 Před 2 lety +14

      That whetstone probably constitutes the bulk of the price anyway lmao.

    • @positronium3525
      @positronium3525 Před 2 lety +6

      Go with a Chosera or other reputable whetstone manufacturer.

  • @LRM12o8
    @LRM12o8 Před rokem +6

    I only became aware of the Kamikoto knife scam after the Established Titles one by the same company blew, but I've always been sceptical about these knives.
    Now, I don't know anything about kitchen knives other than they better be sharp, but it's always been hella sus to me how much they would highlight that their knives are alledgedly made using "traditional Japanese techniques", but would never actually name these supposed techniques, making it impossible to research whether they're actually a thing that has a meaningful impact on the quality of the finished product.

  • @ThePandaPhotographer
    @ThePandaPhotographer Před rokem +4

    First and foremost, I was growing upon Osaka and never heard of this steel craftsman name ever. When I’d found out by email they were wanted to sponsor a video, I’ve email back with a no way in Japanese text and explained in Japanese why and no reason still…. Red flag 15:50
    By the way, Honshu is one of four Island that makes up Japan. That means it could be from any prefecture in Honshu. So remember that kids

  • @Devynwithawhy
    @Devynwithawhy Před 2 lety +302

    Shad gets offered a sponsorship, and responds with research and a a roasting review of a poor product.
    Lovin it!

    • @zany_zombie7276
      @zany_zombie7276 Před 2 lety +8

      That's why I'm a sub xD

    • @Kiyoone
      @Kiyoone Před 2 lety +5

      Just got recommended in this channel... I am impressed that he did a 50+ min destroying the knife scammers.

    • @russwilliams4777
      @russwilliams4777 Před 2 lety +8

      Hell yeah! But just imagine how great the product will be when Shad _accepts_ a sponsorship from a knifemaker...

    • @gerardjagroo
      @gerardjagroo Před 2 lety +3

      The sponsorship is from Masterchef not Kamikoto.

    • @sholahverassa8582
      @sholahverassa8582 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zany_zombie7276 And I am a dom, but it's unrelated.

  • @almubarizunarchery4607
    @almubarizunarchery4607 Před 2 lety +262

    For the damage test, i would assume that the reason why the kamikoto knife didnt get damaged as much is because, as mentioned, its a softer type of steel so it was able to deform to the sword cut easier without chipping pieces off. Like how if you took a hammer to a glass pane vs a block of clay, one would shatter into a hundred pieces and the other would just deform .

    • @-Cheif
      @-Cheif Před 2 lety +8

      Like states previously about 420J, high corrosion resistance, and high toughness. But Zero edge retention lol

    • @markir9
      @markir9 Před 2 lety +1

      Also the Kamikoto blade is a bit thicker, so a bit more mass to resist the cut. I'm not sure it is actually lack of hardness that is the issue - I'd suspect poor heat treatment (in particular - stuffed up the tempering stage) - which typically results in a knife that loses its edge fast but is hard to sharpen.

    • @CzechTex
      @CzechTex Před 2 lety +2

      Tensile strength or hardness will affect how a steel reacts to other objects with certain strengths.
      Take ceramics for example: really fantastic hardness, low tensile. Meaning it's great for cutting something with a lower hardness but will not withstand impact from something with greater tensile strength (concrete, steel, aluminum!)
      Really enjoyed this review and exposé of marketing scheme.

    • @stompingpeak2043
      @stompingpeak2043 Před 2 lety +1

      The kami was thicker than the free knife. Both had the same result

    • @annslow41
      @annslow41 Před 2 lety +1

      Well said. My thoughts exactly

  • @feldegast
    @feldegast Před rokem +5

    I love that you made a knife out of a ruler for comparison 😃 and the joy/incredulity you show while testing is great, love the distructive test, oh and I love your book collection, very nice 😍

  • @davidsykes6584
    @davidsykes6584 Před rokem +3

    I always find it funny when a company tries to sell their product because of 'Fine Japanese Steel' when classic Japanese steel was always notorious for it's inherent weakness (as you mention because of the sand grain), and was why the folding process used in blades came about to strengthen them in the first place.

  • @gleipnirrr
    @gleipnirrr Před 2 lety +436

    I value reviews like this one so much, Shad. It feels like sincere reviews of garbage brands are more and more rare these days, maybe due to some creators' fear that they'll scare away sponsors. I hope to see more content like this

    • @BlackSunCompany
      @BlackSunCompany Před 2 lety +4

      Money unfortunately is the reason. The only way that you get honest reviews is if there's no financial incentive to promote the product. If your livelihood is dependent on pushing a product, hell yeah you're going to shill it for all you're worth. Patreon has helped some get away from that but it's still problematic.
      Like Sayune (さゆね) mentioned in one of the other favorited comments, this doesn't look to be an actual Japanese brand. The name does seem weird; I'd usually expect the kanji they used rather to refer to music played on a koto (箏曲) rather than a koto itself (琴). And even then, it's a bit... anachronistic? I'd usually see it written with the more common kanji (琴曲).
      And yeah, it doesn't matter where the blasted steel comes from even if it was a good grade for knives. The only differences you might see in that is some of the impurities and those are all *within certain tolerances*. This looks to me like this company is taking advantage of the recent Japanophilia craze to push their own cheap product at a premium price. As the saying goes: if you can't dazzle them with brilliance then you can baffle them with bullshit.

  • @JerGol
    @JerGol Před rokem +410

    This has aged very well and become very current! Well done for your awareness 6M ago and for being in front of the furore kicking off in November 22!

    • @chaost4544
      @chaost4544 Před rokem +8

      Shadiversity needs to be recognized as one of the content creators to expose the multilayered scam early on.

  • @Stefan8u
    @Stefan8u Před rokem +2

    Congrats Shad I watched this on release and heeded your warning! Thankyou for this public service!

  • @kevinsargent
    @kevinsargent Před rokem +5

    Most CZcamsrs would just take the cash. My first time seeing a video of yours but impressed you did your due diligence

  • @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO
    @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO Před rokem +428

    As a knife nerd, I assumed they were a scam the first time I saw an ad for them. The thing is if they were cheaper they'd be a fair play but for the money you can get proper high quality knives.

    • @greaserpup
      @greaserpup Před rokem +21

      ngl this has always struck me as similar to Vector Marketing/Cutco, just without the MLM aspect - just the combination of overpriced knives and deceptive marketing practices (the 'company is actually owned by a different, bigger company with a dubious reputation' aspect is also comparable...)

    • @taumctauface1886
      @taumctauface1886 Před rokem +8

      Could I possibly trouble you with a recommendation for a proper quality knife brand? I've tried to do research but I always get stuck in a rabbit hole of dozens of articles that seem more like advertising than actual information. I would be very grateful.

    • @jonasstahl9826
      @jonasstahl9826 Před rokem +5

      @@greaserpup Anything, you see an add of is a scam.
      If the product has realy good quality a friend would have told you or you already know it ontop the company spends money on the add, they could have used the money to improve quality further or lower the price.

    • @mostlymagical3220
      @mostlymagical3220 Před rokem +6

      Yeah their 7” santoku is a whopping $8 cheaper than a proper Wusthof 7” santoku. Absolutely outrageous

    • @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO
      @CAIDMASTEROFPYRO Před rokem +5

      @@taumctauface1886 if you care about looks, go Tojiro if you don't go Victorinox.

  • @steelmouth83
    @steelmouth83 Před rokem +483

    this may trend soon with the company just now being exposed as a scam and they been adverting on a whole lot of youtube channels, good for you Shad having raised this 6 months ago

    • @johnathon007
      @johnathon007 Před rokem +20

      Chairman Pooh wants to know your location. You can't make a mockery of West Taiwan like this. 😅

    • @alejandrolievano5573
      @alejandrolievano5573 Před rokem +13

      He should do a follow up video on established titles

    • @Cryosxify
      @Cryosxify Před rokem +16

      so it's some Finnish scammer who moved his operations to Hong Kong/china

    • @federationprime
      @federationprime Před rokem +5

      I made a joke on Count Dankula's channel a long time ago about Raid SL being a money laundering operation, I wonder if I was right.

    • @rohmatkholis7384
      @rohmatkholis7384 Před rokem

      @@johnathon007 Chairman Pooh still busy to controlled democracy that happen right now...

  • @NickJayy212
    @NickJayy212 Před rokem +2

    The 420j experienced lees damage because the steel is extremely soft. That's why the sword seemed to "cut into" the Kamikoto. The 3Cr chipped out because of the slightly higher hardness.

  • @thornsong_alchemist
    @thornsong_alchemist Před rokem +3

    Okay, I've had a little bit of training from professional chefs, and one of the things they taught us was what knife qualities to look for to get decent knives for our home practice. And based on what I learned from that... Pleeease go with the Masterchef one over the Kamikoto. The Master chef is waaaay more practical for a home chef's all-purpose knife. The fact that the knife has that bit of a curve to it is going to help a lot with making it so you can cut faster and with less force because you can rock the knife more easily. The thinner edge is also going to really help with reducing the pressure you need to make a cut. And the handle is going to be a lot more comfortable. Not super noticeable if you only cut a little bit every now and then, but believe me, I've had some of the most painful blisters from having to cut all day on a knife shaped like the Kamikoto one. I get that they're trying to go for a whole "traditional Japanese" thing with all their marketing and whatnot, so their knives are obviously based off Japanese tradition instead of French, but even with the shape differences between the two traditions... I think a knife with a shape like that is really meant to be more of a specialized use knife instead of an all-purpose one. Specialized knives are great... for doing exactly what they're specialized for. All-purpose knives don't necessarily do *exactly* the one specific thing, but they're pretty good for *most* things. You usually end up kind of becoming best friends with your all-purpose knife, at least in my experience. Personally, I would take one good all-purpose knife over 100 specialized ones any day. But selling all those specialized ones makes them look more high-end, because ooo, this must be professional, right, because you, a home chef don't recognize it, so that must mean it's something ✨professionals✨ use. Nah. Most professional chefs I've met have one, special, high-quality, all-purpose knife that is their best friend and animal companion. And all their other knives are... nice.

  • @bebotime2941
    @bebotime2941 Před 2 lety +325

    Material Scientist student here: The number on the steel that they have as the industry standard is a number code that shows the weight percentage of each metal in the alloy. For example, AISI304 is a type of stainless steel used in structural pieces, and has roughly 18-20 wt% Chromium (wt% in this case being the unit symbol of "Percent by weight")
    420j2 (also known as AISI 420) has ~12-14wt% chromium from what I could find, and it's not nearly as hard as 304 steel.
    AISI 420 has a hardness of 192 HBW, which is a measure of kilograms of force per mm^2
    304 has a hardness of 200 HBW at a minimum for the quality standard.
    This allows the knives that Kamikoto makes to be surgically sharp for a few cuts, as we've seen in the test, but you'll need to sharpen them basically after every use to keep the same level of sharpness as a normal stainless steel knife.

    • @DysnomiaFilms
      @DysnomiaFilms Před 2 lety +30

      420 hardness huehuehue

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 Před 2 lety +15

      @@DysnomiaFilms topkek69

    • @bombomos
      @bombomos Před 2 lety +12

      Aircraft mechanic here: It's crazy how different industries have different labels for the type of metal they use. Like one of our Aluminum alloys is 2024-T4 or 7075

    • @thecookseye7383
      @thecookseye7383 Před 2 lety +12

      Their heat treat is also wildly variant at 53 hrc +/- 2, so it's potentially as low as 51 hrc which is so damn soft that it isn't even suitable for any kind of cutting implement. I've sharpened about 20 of these in the last month and the grain structure is quite poor with the worst edge stability of any knife I've had to sharpen. The burr just disintegrates and takes your apex with it. What specifically enrages me about this brand is their marketing of Japanese aesthetic and claiming Japanese bladesmithing provenance when they're actually fake single bevels, Japanese single bevels have a flat lip and hollow grind on the non bevel side (uraoshi/urasuki) for sharpening and food release, these don't. They're garbage chunky grinds that even make Cutco look good.

    • @markir9
      @markir9 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thecookseye7383 Good points. Yeah making a single bevel knife out of that steel type is just wrong. I find it very frustrating - they obviously spent some time making them *look* nice. If they had used even a fairly low end reasonable steel (VG10 or VG5) and heat treated it properly...they could probably do that same marketing scam re price but at leat the knife would be ok rather than crap!

  • @fizz576
    @fizz576 Před 2 lety +362

    Cool I was hoping someone would test these things they always seemed kinda sketchy.

    • @kana22693
      @kana22693 Před 2 lety +12

      If you do lots of cooking I think quantity >>> quality. Cheap knives cut veggies just fine. Get the cheapest piece of crap stainless steel knives out there, sharpen them, use them for like 3 months, sharpen them again and throw them away after another 3 months. In the end you'll spend like $12-$15 a year on kitchen knives.

    • @winsunwong5648
      @winsunwong5648 Před 2 lety +4

      Modern forging techniques and traditional western technique both have nothing to do with the quality of the steel though, steel composition is determined by a factory

    • @winsunwong5648
      @winsunwong5648 Před 2 lety +1

      also, "traditional" western forging techniques, if you mean steel creation, were inferior to chinese methods up until the 17th century, because they used inferior furnace technology. The only reason europe was able to keep up quality wise in anyway was because they had decent quality base iron ore in the nordic region and germany

    • @bigguy7353
      @bigguy7353 Před 2 lety

      How would you even know they are "sketchy" without personally testing them? They are knives. They are steel, which is either mild or hardened, both of which must be treated differently. They cut. No scam here besides anyone paying full retail for them.

    • @bigguy7353
      @bigguy7353 Před 2 lety +3

      @@winsunwong5648 There were high quality swords in Europe in the 11th century.

  • @uhohmemebiggestboy212
    @uhohmemebiggestboy212 Před rokem +5

    They approached the CZcams sword man thinking he would advertise their product, they forgot he actually knows a lot more about knifes than them though just destroyed them

  • @Lychee76
    @Lychee76 Před rokem

    I’m glad I came across you mate! I’ll keep my review short and sweet unlike the vernacular used by the product/company you have revealed!

  • @kandyweeb1885
    @kandyweeb1885 Před 2 lety +238

    Hey shad, my cousin recently got the $306 set that you have as a wedding gift. Abs he noticed that the blades dulled unusually quickly too. Really goes to show how marketing can ruin the perception around certain items.

    • @greylocke100
      @greylocke100 Před 2 lety +11

      Tell him to take it to a bladesmith. A good bladesmith "MAY" be able to do a surface hardening of the cutting edge and put a good easy to maintain bevel on it. A bladesmith is someone who does all blades, not just knives and swords. I've had bladesmiths repair scythes, and other farming tools in addition to touching up my knives.
      Now that I think about it, the bladesmiths I have worked with in the past are somewhat regional, so they might be called something else in other parts of the world or even countries. I originally found the first bladesmith by asking a blacksmith about repairing a scythe blade and he sent me to a bladesmith the next town over.

    • @thewalnutwoodworker6136
      @thewalnutwoodworker6136 Před 2 lety +10

      @@greylocke100 This is garbage steel that I would not even touch, I would redo the heat treat if it was 1084 or 1095 but not this junk.

    • @greylocke100
      @greylocke100 Před 2 lety +2

      @@thewalnutwoodworker6136 Which is why I said a bladesmith was needed. Thank you. You just cut about 3 hours of explanation out of any discussion. 😁

    • @thewalnutwoodworker6136
      @thewalnutwoodworker6136 Před 2 lety +5

      @@greylocke100 The steel is too bad to warrant redoing the heat treat. It was probably hardened as high as it would go, witch is probably in the 50-55 HRC range. I have redon the heat treat on a few old chisels that were overheated by the previous owner on a grinder. This ruined the temper and caused them to loose their edge too quick. I put them in my forge and heat treated them, tempered at 400 for an hour.

    • @bill-nolastnamesupplied-958
      @bill-nolastnamesupplied-958 Před 2 lety

      Softer blades can be better than harder less resilient blades, because most people don't use cutting boards exclusively underneath their knives and thus cut with ceramic or glass underneath instead. By not using a resilient surface underneath the thing you are cutting will quickly blunt any knife, even though the harder knives will take longer to blunt. The advantage with softer steel knives is that they are easier to sharpen with the steels, ceramic sharpeners or sharpening stones and most people are not willing to spend the greatly increased sharpening times to restore the edges. Therefore a softer steel knife is perceived to be a better knife because it is easier to return to a 'sharp' edge. Please only use cutting boards and don't use good knives to cut with ceramic plates underneath and then the harder knives will shine as the better knives.

  • @Ihasanart
    @Ihasanart Před 2 lety +337

    As a folding knife collector who was a steel snob for a while, Kamikoto have always just screamed scam to my instincts, glad to see my instincts proven right.

    • @Simon-ho6ly
      @Simon-ho6ly Před 2 lety +11

      For me it was just retail experience... They promise a heck of a lot with no real cause... Just look at the marketing you see from kai or global kitchen knives... It's basically 'we exist, we make knives using these steels and methods.. and this is the range we make' no promises . No weird name dropping

    • @MrMonsterjesus
      @MrMonsterjesus Před 2 lety +1

      @@Simon-ho6ly Tbh tho, Kai has a decent amount of name tax these days.
      They were GREAT a couple of years ago, but now they are a bit overpriced imo.
      Still very good knives from a known brand, but not the first recommendation anymore.
      Global is great tho if you want something good without spending a fortune.

    • @Simon-ho6ly
      @Simon-ho6ly Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrMonsterjesus fair, my Kai knives are about 5 years old so my experience is more with them, i was fortunate enough to pick up a couple of knives in a stock liquidation sale so no real experience with the more recent ones..
      Global I found a uk company who often has sets going remarkably cheap, usually slightly damaged boxes, also liquidation from other retailers, if you dont mind the shipping its "hearts of stur" in the uk, ive done well from them

    • @max84678
      @max84678 Před 2 lety +1

      I have to ask, I remember this from a few years back but there was a company that was selling a Damascus folding knife and prided themselves on the fact that the steel of the knife came from the Terpitz battleship from ww2. They were selling it for an extremely high price kinda like these kimikoto knives but I want to get your opinion on them of if they are just as scam-like as kimikoto are or not.

    • @jed-henrywitkowski6470
      @jed-henrywitkowski6470 Před 2 lety +1

      Have you ever, had the temptation to dismiss your gut, because you understand that you do not know everything?
      Just curious, because I certainly have or have been tempted to.

  • @Zanderguard
    @Zanderguard Před rokem +3

    Thanks to this video, Kamikoto now works on me as an Ad for your channel. Everytime I see a Kamikoto Ad on another channel I stop and think huh, I wonder how Shad's doing.

  • @vikram5491
    @vikram5491 Před rokem +1

    I've never cared enough for a knife to watch an hour long video, but I can't stop watching this. Great stuff.

  • @TheKotor2309
    @TheKotor2309 Před 2 lety +864

    Aye, Shad is the man. While I haven’t always agreed with him; he is a man of principle and proof that success doesn’t always cost integrity. Mad respect for him 🍻

    • @dellikakechi5665
      @dellikakechi5665 Před 2 lety +17

      Indeed, the case can be made that true success *requires* integrity.

    • @morsorcus8152
      @morsorcus8152 Před 2 lety +1

      Except he recently proved hes so pigheaded he absolutely will not admit when hes blatantly wrong. Some guys hes collabd with seem to be legit but shad here proved he has no integrity.

    • @crispychips7161
      @crispychips7161 Před 2 lety +19

      @@morsorcus8152 what are you referring to when you say "blatantly wrong"?

    • @blob643
      @blob643 Před 2 lety +26

      @@morsorcus8152
      Nice argument senator, why don't you back it up with a source?!

    • @noobatredstone3001
      @noobatredstone3001 Před 2 lety +20

      @@morsorcus8152 you can’t make a statement without clarifying what you’re referring to. So far you made it seem as if you just described yourself..

  • @adamlees6305
    @adamlees6305 Před 2 lety +282

    Story from 40 year ago: worked in heavy engineering as metallurgist
    Chemist came to us with a set of cutlery he had bought in middle East, supposed high quality and expensive, but a knife had broken in a dishwasher. These were very good looking pieces, luxury handles, looked at fracture surface with microscope, just poorly worked steel, carbide and slag visible. Rip offs nothing new, caveat emptor. But I did have an old butter knife of my grandmother, put an edge on it like a scalpel, kept it for years, sheffield steel.

    • @DSiren
      @DSiren Před 2 lety +21

      for about a hundred years the best quality steel you could get in any appreciable volume was American. For small things like cutlery this is meaningless, but for big projects like warships, tanks, rebar, and in the early stages bridges, it was American or compromise. Hell, part of the reason you hear terms like 'effective armor thickness' in warship and tank design discussions is because the quantity of quality steel the Americans had access to was unparalleled, and when comparing the armor of a Japanese or even Royal Navy warship to that of a US warship, the protection per thickness of armor was dissimilar. A 20% reduction in effectiveness for the Japanese armor dissimilar.

    • @minibob9252
      @minibob9252 Před 2 lety +28

      @@DSiren Really? what is your source? It is very contradicting to the fact that, for example, the Carnegie Steel Company Pittsburgh produced such low quality steel plates for the early US Navy and other countries that a congressional investigation commitee jugded that the "shameless character of this cheating [...] makes them unworthy of trust". Other sources cite that the only period where american steel had any higher significance on the world market was during the 1940s and 1950s (Todays market shares excluded).
      BTW the term effective armor thickness is usually used for sloped armor. It describes the relative thickness of the armor plate caused by the angle. As result a sloped plate could be thinner but has the same effectiveness as a thicker straight plate. The term has nothing to do with the quality of the material.

    • @DSiren
      @DSiren Před 2 lety +6

      @@minibob9252 the term has a double meaning. In tanks the angle of the armor has more effect than the quality of the steel but that changes on warships.

    • @AndyD25
      @AndyD25 Před 2 lety +2

      @@DSiren nice copypasta

    • @DSiren
      @DSiren Před 2 lety +1

      @@AndyD25 excuse me?

  • @bobbykozak6032
    @bobbykozak6032 Před rokem

    I think you are mostly correct on stating the standard rating of steels. I had noticed though, that even with the same standard, the supplier does seem to matter. One shop I used to work for sourced a batch of steel from Taiwan, and it stunk. Had hard/soft patches throughout individual pieces, and even discoloured in places. Never found out what it was, but we suspected the additives from the foundry.

  • @Tsuki17
    @Tsuki17 Před rokem +3

    Extremely excellent breakdown and demonstration. Thanks for working so hard on this! It's appalling how low the quality in comparison to the price, absolutely insane. I'm new to your channel and am looking forward to watching more of your videos! Have an awesome day.

  • @TerpTheBandit
    @TerpTheBandit Před rokem +225

    I wound up here after Scott Schafer did a video recently revealing another company - Established Titles - was a scam.
    Turns out Kamikoto is owned by the same company. This company also owns Deal Dash, which, if you've been on the internet for a while, you've known was a scam for a long time.

    • @marcbhoy2811
      @marcbhoy2811 Před rokem +5

      Same

    • @ShaferScott
      @ShaferScott Před rokem +21

      I ended up here after watching Scott’s video as well. This bro knows his knives.

    • @Canadish
      @Canadish Před rokem +7

      So all the companies that get advertised through influences on CZcams?
      Imagine my shock.

    • @bige8949
      @bige8949 Před rokem +1

      What makes established titles a scam, just wondering? I'm not too familiar

    • @LambdaHidden
      @LambdaHidden Před rokem

      @@bige8949 Pretty much everything that Established Titles advertises is false. You do not legally own the land you purchase from them, you are not eligible for the title in your name and you have no proof that any of your money will go to charity.

  • @-Zikade-
    @-Zikade- Před 2 lety +346

    Kamikoto were like "O hey a guy who likes pointy things, perfect sponsorship opportunity here!" and Shad is like "Nah, but thanks for giving me this nice idea for a video. I'm _sure_ you'll like it too." Lmao! Shad the Savage. MUCH appreciated.

  • @charlieghague
    @charlieghague Před rokem +2

    I'll never understand why people buy things like this. There's a reason they have to push so much advertising at you. It's because the product is junk and the only way to sell it is to get a bunch of well-known creators to constantly push it. I'd much rather spend the same money on a knife that has zero marketing but very popular amongst professional chefs. The best products are the ones that speak for themselves.

  • @Contarius9
    @Contarius9 Před rokem +1

    Plot twist: Shad is actually sponsored by Masterchef and we just sat through a 1-hour ad.

  • @sirhenry9313
    @sirhenry9313 Před 2 lety +259

    Thank you Shad.
    Genuinely, thank you. You got offered a sponsorship for something not good, and you actually did the research and took the time to give us a review instead of just taking the money.
    You should be proud of what you've done and how this is presented 🙏

    • @justingibson4111
      @justingibson4111 Před 2 lety +7

      For real, this dudes integrity is to be respected.

    • @simonw.1223
      @simonw.1223 Před 2 lety +1

      @@justingibson4111 and I saw a video from scimandan showing this as a sponsored ad. I wonder how he would think after seeing this.

  • @SotraEngine4
    @SotraEngine4 Před rokem +536

    Honestly, at this point, I expect near all youtube sponsors to be scams

    • @halinaqi2194
      @halinaqi2194 Před rokem +1

      A lot of the sponsor products really are subpar and trash for their price points. These companies purposely go through youtubers because ppl are much more likely to trust things coming out of a person they like more than a random company.

    • @YaoEspirito
      @YaoEspirito Před rokem +72

      I don't trust that food company he's enthusiastically crowing about either.

    • @Skili19
      @Skili19 Před rokem +53

      yep, the same goes for raycon earbuds, they are low to medium quality and you can find the same insides in some low price earbuds the only plus they have is the size, they are smaller than the equivalents. But if you want bettersound quality just don't buy wireless
      (this is mostly what I got from reviews and some technical sites, never owned a pair... never will)

    • @SotraEngine4
      @SotraEngine4 Před rokem +7

      @@Skili19 I have some Jabra ones I am very pleased with

    • @charleshaskell2056
      @charleshaskell2056 Před rokem +4

      fucken same dude

  • @bovanshi6564
    @bovanshi6564 Před rokem +3

    I just assume that 75% of products promoted by youtubers is garbage, 20% is at the very least half scams, and 5% is genuinely good products.

  • @gunsnwater2668
    @gunsnwater2668 Před rokem +1

    As a steelworker I can tell you not all steel of the same grade is equal. Some plants put out real crap. Surface finish, heat treat and lack of cracks mean a lot. There are bride constructions that had to remove and replace Chinese sourced steel because of low quality.

  • @adel4476
    @adel4476 Před 2 lety +200

    I saw these being advertised and immediately felt something was off, so I did my own research and found, quite literally, no info of the steel in their site, besides the fact that it's "Japanese steel", now they say its a type of stainless steel which to my recollection isn't part of a centuries old Japanese tradition. What bothers me also is the annoying use of buzzwords to make it sound more fancy, instead of directly telling us the type type of steel when you buy a knife.
    Sorry for the ramble but I've been annoyed by this for a bit now, glad someone's talking about it.

    • @SergioLeonardoCornejo
      @SergioLeonardoCornejo Před 2 lety

      Yeah. I actually feel less respect to the guys who advertise these fakes than to those who advertise mobile games.

    • @truetheternal2314
      @truetheternal2314 Před 2 lety +2

      Japanese steel is actually quite bad. that's why they had to fold it so much to work out impurities to get a quality steel. Also why they needed U.S. steel to maintain their war efforts in ww 2

    • @adel4476
      @adel4476 Před 2 lety +2

      @@truetheternal2314 Yes, no, maybe? The biggest drawback of tamahagane is the insane amount of labour it takes to produce. I can't comment on the quality of properly made and finished tamahagane I do feel like a big factor would be just time efficiency and costs

    • @ujiltromm7358
      @ujiltromm7358 Před 2 lety +2

      The folding doesn't remove impurities as much as it spreads them evenly so there's no pocket of impurity leading to a weak point.
      Folding removes carbon, moving from steel toward iron. Folding too many times leaves you with low-carbon steel or worse, pure iron.

    • @sciloj
      @sciloj Před 2 lety

      The trick with "Japanese steel" is to make anyone imagine their own best thing. Someone thinks "tamahagane", someone thinks "blue paper", someone - VG-10, etc. This is just how it plays with people's imagination.

  • @johnathansaegal3156
    @johnathansaegal3156 Před 2 lety +261

    I am a (now disabled) iron and steel worker/mechanical engineer. Your demonstration of different types of steel is spot-on. Knowing the different types of steel is important when designing anything from steel. The use of the item is what you generally use to determine the type of steel needed for manufacturing or design of the item/equipment you are making.
    (such as "marine conditions" or, if you need a very hard steel for ball bearings - you would never make ball bearings from a soft steel!)

  • @falconinthedive
    @falconinthedive Před rokem +1

    The anxiety of him watching him gush about how much his wife loves her free knife and then "and now to destruction testing"

  • @ve2vfd
    @ve2vfd Před rokem +3

    That Master Chef knife sells for $19 and often is on sale for $14 in Canadian big box stores like Canadian Tire.

  • @Matt-bg5wg
    @Matt-bg5wg Před rokem +222

    Fun fact: Kamikato knives is owned by the same company that does Established Titles. It is a company based out of Hong Kong. That’s about as much as you need to know.

    • @RenegadeVile
      @RenegadeVile Před rokem +20

      Hong Kong, a village on Honshu in Japan.

    • @beanzworld
      @beanzworld Před rokem +4

      @@RenegadeVile hong kong a village of hong kong in hong kong, CHINA

    • @nodramalama9531
      @nodramalama9531 Před rokem

      @@beanzworld no shit sherlock

    • @rubyy.7374
      @rubyy.7374 Před rokem +18

      @@beanzworld They claim they’re based in Japan. That’s the joke. Of course Hong Kong is in China.

    • @shawnlizeleatherdale4052
      @shawnlizeleatherdale4052 Před rokem

      @@rubyy.7374 lol, NOT yet officially. supposedly 50 years from 1997 until we are China. Until then we are an SAR.

  • @briton1509
    @briton1509 Před 2 lety +176

    This video also serves as a warning. Don't try to sponsor Shad if your product is bad.

    • @zwenkwiel816
      @zwenkwiel816 Před 2 lety +19

      always nice to see youtubers with some integrity...

    • @Eclispestar
      @Eclispestar Před 2 lety

      It rimes. Should be on a T-shirt. Link to t spiring in the description

    • @kronos6948
      @kronos6948 Před 2 lety +6

      Ehh...bad in a way he is schooled in, yes. But hello fresh? That's more for people who don't know how to cook. At least he said he and his wife are no chefs earlier in the video. It's cheaper to get stuff at the local supermarket and whip up a meal if you know what you're doing than to go with HelloFresh. I'm not saying they're all bad, I'm just saying they should cater to people who aren't that good in the kitchen.

    • @CrymsonNite
      @CrymsonNite Před 2 lety +4

      Same with Karl Smallwood
      You should see his absolute teardown of raid shadow legends

    • @zwenkwiel816
      @zwenkwiel816 Před 2 lety +8

      @@kronos6948 hello fresh is kind of dumb but at least they're up front about it. Like They're not saying that these are ancient Chinese vegetables or something. You just pay more for the convenience of not having to leave your house

  • @zapador
    @zapador Před rokem +3

    I'm shocked how many people believe in this marketing scam. The first time I saw someone promote these knives my bullshit detector immediately went crazy.

  • @johnbell5612
    @johnbell5612 Před rokem

    Great video and very informative but had to laugh, the first unskippable add that pop up was for the huusk knife 🤣

  • @ATurkeySandwichGAME
    @ATurkeySandwichGAME Před 2 lety +87

    I was a cook in the army for a few years. THE best knife ive ever used is a 7" santoku knife that was like $12 at walmart. Ive been using this blade for almost 7 years

    • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
      @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Před 2 lety +5

      Victorinox?

    • @ATurkeySandwichGAME
      @ATurkeySandwichGAME Před 2 lety +5

      @@the_inquisitive_inquisitor kendo colors ,by hampton forge. its a purple bladed and handled knife i got in walmart while i was stationed in virginia

    • @the_inquisitive_inquisitor
      @the_inquisitive_inquisitor Před 2 lety +4

      @@ATurkeySandwichGAME Stainless steel can turn all kinds of cool colors. Super pain in the ass to work with in the home forge though lol

    • @nicoleroth3127
      @nicoleroth3127 Před 2 lety

      @@the_inquisitive_inquisitor Still makes the best turning knives!!! My Victorinox bread knife is also great, though I prefer my old unbranded one.

    • @nicoleroth3127
      @nicoleroth3127 Před 2 lety

      I've also worked as a chef for fifteen years and agree, my favourite knives are either the unbranded ones, or the basic lines from both Victorinox (especially the turning knives) and Zwilling (pairing knife and butcher knife). My first knife-set was very basic and not from a brand and I still use it twenty-five years down the line and still love using it. Instead of getting an overpriced knife, rather spend that money on a good sharpening steel, though I often just use the rim of an old stoneware bowl to sharpen my knives, so even that isn't a must. Especially for my turning knives, the bowl works a treat. - Trick from my gran/ great-gran, btw.

  • @TheSuluGuy
    @TheSuluGuy Před rokem +168

    Another reason surgical tools are often made of cheap steel is because it gets thrown out after one surgery

    • @AccidentallyOnPurpose
      @AccidentallyOnPurpose Před rokem +14

      They can be autoclaved too, but even then they would lose their edge and have to be resharpened.

    • @mexcore14
      @mexcore14 Před rokem

      @@AccidentallyOnPurpose autoclave is the worst enemy for anything you want to stay sharp, it works wonders for things like forceps tho. I think a better method is UV

    • @AccidentallyOnPurpose
      @AccidentallyOnPurpose Před rokem

      @@mexcore14 Some parts of the world use ionizing radiation sterilization too. It works really well, but there have been many mishaps at sterilization plants though.

  • @liamcollinson5695
    @liamcollinson5695 Před rokem +4

    I was skeptical of them mainly because I was a sous chef and have never heard of them unlike brands like global that I have used and are great. Global also offer a 35 year extended warranty with only the postage been charged for assuming it was not miss used

  • @Dorafjol
    @Dorafjol Před rokem

    Impressed with how you integrated the sponsor. So sensible!

  • @DirtyRobot
    @DirtyRobot Před 2 lety +241

    Found this a bit late but...
    It is a Chinese company with a tiny office in Tokyo that handles the online presence. All steel is made in China and they have nothing to do with Japan other than the tiny office.
    This type of thing destroys the reputation of authentic Japanese products that have taken many years, sometimes hundreds of years to create a reputation.

    • @zettozettomer2640
      @zettozettomer2640 Před rokem +29

      BUT WHAT ABOUT THE CERTIFICATE OF AUTHENTICITY?!? WHAT ABOUT HONSHU, MR. ROBOT?! WHAT ABOUT HONSHU? THINK OF THE SPECIAL SAND!!!
      fucking lol

    • @anasevi9456
      @anasevi9456 Před rokem +24

      worst thing is they are still dogsh!t even by chinese knife standards.
      You can get a Chinese shibazi Cleaver with a core made of 9cr and a tested hardness of 59HRC for $40 on amazon.

    • @mjanny6330
      @mjanny6330 Před rokem +5

      Chinas vengeance is economic, not militaristic.

    • @MicroageHD
      @MicroageHD Před rokem

      China always pulling this BS.

    • @CorvusCorone68
      @CorvusCorone68 Před rokem +2

      @@mjanny6330 for now...

  • @bare_bear_hands
    @bare_bear_hands Před 2 lety +126

    Your point about raising the price and people buying it more is so true, as I learned in marketing. Others in my group started charging less for their service and were barely surviving, but once they TRIPLED their rates they actually got more customers! And these weren't the "can you make a discount?" customers, oh no, these were the "I value your service and will pay what you consider to be the fair price." This is really odd, but, people, don't ever go cheap. It just doesn't work.

    • @calsalitra4689
      @calsalitra4689 Před 2 lety +26

      Makes sense to me. People tend to look at the price of something and make assumptions of its quality based on that. If somethings too cheap, the customer think "hmm, seems cheap. The quality is probably pretty bad". Bump up the price enough and those same people are going to actually look at the product once the price isn't so cheap anymore. Everything about your product is telling something to the consumer, and the price tag is one of them.

    • @bare_bear_hands
      @bare_bear_hands Před 2 lety

      @@calsalitra4689 Precisely :D

    • @vyktorehon5995
      @vyktorehon5995 Před 2 lety +4

      @@calsalitra4689 that's the downside to making products cheaper and more accessible to common people. Makes alot of other people think it's a inferior product

    • @RavenAdventwings
      @RavenAdventwings Před 2 lety +4

      There's also the possibility that by raising the price point, you've shifted your target audience/customer up a grade. The big paying buyers tend to want high quality over thriftiness, if what experience has told me. Therefore, if the customers feel the quality is superior, they'll gladly pay the premium.

    • @vyktorehon5995
      @vyktorehon5995 Před 2 lety +3

      @@RavenAdventwings yea. For me it's the complete opposite funnily. I just look at the price and almost nothing else

  • @isoid
    @isoid Před rokem

    Interesting that the line for Hello Fresh said to enjoy the "spring" but May in Australia is during Autumn...

  • @anthonywesley5306
    @anthonywesley5306 Před rokem +1

    I’ve been a cook for a long time and honestly I like a cheap medium blade straight steel with a plastic handle. If you are in the industry you know the ones I’m talking about. Just go to a restaurant supply shop and look for some inexpensive bulk blades. They cut nicely, take sharpening and the steel well and you won’t feel bad when you need to toss them. There are a very few items where the knife is critical; cutting fish, carving big cuts of meat and parting poultry, so I have just a couple of nice knives at home. My wife keeps putting them in the dishwasher and I think she knows how much this hurts me.

    • @georgebratina9394
      @georgebratina9394 Před rokem

      Exactly right. A quick sharpening holds an edge for a day's work, aren't damaged easily, and won't develop legs and walk off.