🔪 Elevate Your Culinary Game with Precision Sharpening!
The Presto08810 Professional Electric Knife Sharpener features a user-friendly 3-stage sharpening system designed for both kitchen and sport knives. With a blade thickness selector and precision guides, it ensures optimal sharpening angles for various blade types, delivering razor-sharp results every time.
Grit Type | Light,Medium,Fine |
Color | Multi/None |
Material | Sapphirite wheels, Plastic |
Item Weight | 5.1 Pounds |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 18.43"L x 11.25"W x 2.18"H |
C**B
Reliable Performance and Effortless Sharpening
The Presto knife sharpener is a practical investment for any home cook who values sharp, reliable knives and wants an easy, affordable way to keep them in top condition.The sharpener arrived ready to use right out of the box, with a compact design and non-slip base. Using the sharpener is straightforward. The device features a two-stage sharpening system: the first stage grinds and reshapes dull or damaged edges, while the second stage hones and polishes.I tested the sharpener on various kitchen knives, including chef’s knives, paring knives, and even a serrated bread knife. The results were consistently impressive. Noise level is tolerable and worth putting up with for the benefit of having sharp knives!In summary, the Presto knife sharpener is a good value for its simplicity, speed, and effectiveness.
M**I
Great tool!
Simple to use and great results. Do practice on an old knife which will allow you to learn the proper technique and break in the stones a bit.Update: after 2 weeks of ownership and 30+ knives sharpened, I am completely satisfied with this product. I have sharpened all of my knives, slicing and serrated, and am compiling a nice set for each of my two sons who are moving out and need basic kitchen tools. My new hobby is to rescue unwanted quality knives at yard sales, and give them new lives as high performance tools. The results are truly awsome and it is such a pleasure to work with sharp tools again.Update after approximately 1 month of use. I have sharpened close to 100 knives for friends and family with fantastic results. Some of the negative comments mention the motor to be underpowered. Either the motor is faulty on their unit, or they are pushing down too hard. A very light pressure works best. I would again recommend using one old knife to practice on, which will also break in the stones and perhaps reduce any over aggressive grinding. It is important to position yourself so that you are pulling the knife in a straight line towards yourself to keep the knife along the guide and at a consistent angle to the wheel. Since this is done at a slight angle to the unit, I move my body left or right accordingly. When I am using one of the sharpening slots, I angle my body so that my shoulder and arm are in line with the direction of knife motion. I also count the number of seconds that it takes me to complete the motion to make sure that I am not going too slow or too fast. So for an 8" blade, it should take me about 4 seconds to do one pass. For knives which have a curved tip, you have to raise the handle as you are pulling the tip across the stone to get the proper grind. On a long knife, I often will steady the tip with my other hand until it reaches the back of the unit.It also helps to have a good high intensity light to see the edge for inspection and to see the wheel that you are using so that you can locate the knife precisely. I work in the medical device industry where we sharpen surgical needles which penetrate human tissue, so I am very familiar with what a good edge looks like. I also have a 10x loupe which makes edge inspection very easy. A dull edge will reflect light while a sharp one will not. So if you have a light directly over the edge, if you see specs of light reflecting back at you, that means that those areas are not yet sharp. If you can get a hold of a magnifier, hold it close to your eye, steady your hand by resting it against your cheek, and move the knife towards the magnifier until it comes into focus. Most people hold the object to magnify at arm's length, and move the magnifier until it is in focus, which is incorrect. If used properly, you will have a larger image to inspect.Under magnification, the edge has micro serrations which make it very sharp. My company used to polish our needles so that they were very shiny with a smooth edge, but after developing a test for sharpness, we realized that a dull surface with a micro serrated edge is much sharper. We now use a process which keeps those micro serrations. When I am done sharpening a knife, I pull it very lightly across a finger and can feel it "biting" into the skin. Scary sharp!I have also read on some knife forums that grinding an edge can de-temper the steel and make it weak. I reached out to one of my Metallurgists and was told that unless I can see visual heat lines, which I do not, de-tempering is not occurring. Although when sharpening stainless steel I do not get any sparks, carbon steel does spark a little, which is also a good test to see what type of steel it is if you are not sure. I recently bought a Vintage 10" Chef's Knife which was advertised as "stainless" but it had some light staining on the blade so I suspected that it was made from carbon steel. It did spark during sharpening so this confirmed that I got a carbon steel knife and a real find!Now, some purists will argue that hand honing gives the best results. Perhaps, but I am not collecting priceless knives, but merely buying great knives and turning them into fabulous kitchen tools in a fraction of the time that it takes to hand tone. This sharpener is one of my favorite tools.
T**B
Not top flight, but works well
This is very useful for a quick easy sharpening session. The knives have a large discrepancy as far as the angle of sharpening goes, meaning they do not fit in tightly to one specific angled position. There is a lot of slop and I havent figured out if they should lean one way or the other for the perfect angle. That said they do not get knives hair cutting sharp, but they do get them very sharp, and much better than nothing, and it is very easy to use.
A**L
Should have bought it years ago...
Exactly what we expected. I got sick of dealing with the time involved with sharpening kitchen knives with other methods. I have memories of a nice electric sharpener my friends parents had in the 80's and how fast it could make a dull knife like new again. That and the fact we are at home 6 nights a week and actually cook meals and really use our knives a lot lead to this purchase. My wife is an amazing cook and I do a lot of prep for her, we joke I'm the sous chef and grill/ fry person. It had honestly gotten to the point of frustration trying to keep knives sharp as busy as we are, the kind of thing you don't think about until you need it when you're busy working a lot. I had previously used traditional whetstone and pull thru type sharpeners but they don't hold a candle to this machine in terms of time saved. The unit is so simple to use. It's the good quality I expect from the presto brand. Nothing fancy but from my experience they make well designed products that usually hold up well and just work plain and simple. I was really surprised how quickly the knives were sharp. I was digging through everything in the kitchen and asking my wife what I could sharpen for her lol. Knives came out sharp enough to shave hair off my arm. Definitely wish I'd bought this like15 years ago. As long as it holds up and lasts we are beyond satisfied. Prep time and quality of ingredients is back to on point thanks to this. Seriously, if you're tired of dull knives and don't have hours to sit and hone a dozen of them, this will do the job in minutes and make them like you remember them new. It will do most pocket knives, meat cleavers and filet knives perfectly as well. Highly recommend for the home chef or any good kitchen.
L**G
Reg Reviews: Electric Knife Cutter
I bought this in 2023 and still use it to this day. I love how I can sharpen my kitchen knives at home. We have top quality knives and want to keep them in good shape so it was important that we get our own sharpener. It also saves time and money because I can do it at home instead of bringing it to someone else to [email protected]
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