Evidence-led material guide

14C28N Knife Steel for Blades: What Buyers Should Know

Build a complete 14C28N blade specification covering geometry, HRC, finish, edge, traceability, sample approval and batch QC.

14C28N Knife Steel for Blades: What Buyers Should Know buyer guide

Direct answer · Evidence checked 13 July 2026 · 4–6 minute guide

Short answer

A production-ready 14C28N blade brief needs more than the grade name. It should lock blade profile, stock thickness, primary grind, thickness behind the edge, sharpening angle, finish, target HRC, marking, allowable defects and the intended test method.

  • Geometry determines cutting behavior and edge stress.
  • HRC needs a target, tolerance and test location.
  • Finish, logo and sharpening can introduce their own defects.
  • A golden sample must be measurable—not only visually approved.

Published facts and what they mean

Decision layerWhat the buyer should record
Material layer14C28N identity and traceability.
Engineering layerProfile, stock, grind, edge, heat treatment and finish.
Quality layerMeasurement method, sample size, defect limits and corrective route.

A material datasheet describes controlled steel from its producer. It should be treated as the starting specification, while the finished knife is approved through its own drawing, heat-treatment record and test results.

How to use the facts in a knife decision

Start with intended cutting work

The same steel should not receive the same geometry in a chef knife, folding EDC and field knife. Define materials being cut, expected force, impact risk and maintenance before drawing the blade.

Turn appearance into measurements

Terms such as satin, stonewash and polished need reference samples and defect limits. Grind symmetry, plunge position, logo contrast and edge bevel width should have an agreed inspection method.

Connect sample approval to production

A perfect handmade sample is not useful if its process cannot repeat at order volume. Ask which features change between sample and mass production, then retain boundary samples for acceptable and unacceptable conditions.

Worked buyer scenario

Decision example

A buyer approves a folding blade because it looks sharp and centered, but the drawing never states thickness behind the edge. Production arrives visibly thicker and cuts poorly even though the steel and HRC are correct. The missing geometry dimension—not the material—caused the failure.

Verification and sample plan

  1. Issue a dimensioned blade drawing and finish reference.
  2. State grade, target HRC, tolerance and traceability requirement.
  3. Define edge angle, bevel symmetry and burr acceptance.
  4. List cosmetic zones and critical versus minor defects.
  5. Create a golden sample plus measurable batch inspection sheet.

The acceptance plan should say who tests, which samples are selected, what counts as pass/monitor/reject and what happens when one result falls outside the approved boundary.

Frequently asked questions

What dimensions matter most?

Stock thickness, blade width, primary grind, thickness behind the edge, edge angle, tip geometry and any mechanism interfaces.

Should the blade be marked 14C28N?

A mark helps communication but is not material proof. Decide placement, method and appearance while maintaining traceability records.

What is a golden sample?

The approved physical reference tied to drawings, measurements and defect limits. It is not a substitute for written specifications.

Can the factory choose HRC?

The maker can recommend a process window, but the buyer should approve the final target after considering geometry, use and test results.

Sources and limits

14C28N facts were checked against the Alleima 14C28N product page, 14C28N material datasheet and hardening guide, accessed 13 July 2026.

Producer data gives material guidance, not a warranty for an unspecified finished knife. Current feasibility, compliance, quantity, lead time and sample performance require project-level confirmation.

Turn the guide into a sample brief

Send the knife type, target grade, drawings or reference images, quantity, target market, packaging and acceptance criteria. We will use those details to confirm current feasibility rather than assuming catalog availability.

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