Background
MagnaMax has been in development for a long time. When I first proposed the idea for MagnaCut to Crucible and Niagara in June 2019 I also proposed a high wear resistance version I was calling “stainless 10V.” This version was intended to match the combination of toughness and wear resistance in the non-stainless grades K390, Vanadis 8, and CPM-10V. K390 has developed some popularity in recent years from Spyderco using it in many knives. This steel hits a real sweet spot for having good toughness with very high wear resistance. That high wear resistance gives it excellent edge retention. MagnaMax achieves that same level of toughness and edge retention but with the same excellent corrosion resistance of MagnaCut. MagnaMax achieves these properties by using the same general approach to composition as MagnaCut while increasing carbon, niobium, and vanadium for wear resistance. We are still waiting for the ok from our patent lawyer before releasing the composition, but that will hopefully come soon. The first commercial “heat” of MagnaMax has been delivered to a few knife companies, so it is time to talk about the steel, even if we can’t reveal every detail yet.
With MagnaCut I tried to preach the benefits of “balance” for properties. Not going too extreme for any one property. I promoted the benefits of thinner edges using its excellent toughness, while still having very good wear resistance and edge retention. However, I knew that for some knives they would still benefit from higher edge retention, and that many knife enthusiasts would want a higher edge retention version of MagnaCut. So here it is. I tried to increase the edge retention by a large margin while still maintaining the goal of good balance, and I think the new steel is very successful at achieving that.
Video
There is a video version of the following information:
Edge Retention
The biggest change from MagnaCut is of course the increase in edge retention. MagnaMax matches the edge retention of K390 and Vanadis 8, as was intended:

This also puts it in the same range as steels like CPM-10V and CPM-S110V. It puts it above several notable steels like M390, ZDP-189, S60V, S30V, and CPM-M4. This is a sizeable increase in edge retention over MagnaCut.
Toughness
My stainless toughness chart has gotten pretty busy. MagnaMax is just above Vanax, S35VN, CPM-154, and XHP. These four steels were the toughest powder metallurgy stainless steels available prior to MagnaCut. So MagnaMax matching or exceeding the toughness of these grades is exciting. You will notice that MagnaCut is on the chart twice, once as “MagnaCut” and once as “Erasteel MagnaCut.” You can read about the switch to Erasteel for MagnaCut in this article.

Comparing against its benchmark grades, MagnaMax is the same as Vanadis 8 and K390, a small step above CPM-10V. So even though it is a stainless it still matched the toughness of the non-stainless powder metallurgy steels. So those that have been happy with the toughness of their K390 knives will also be happy with MagnaMax.

Edge Retention-Toughness Balance
Comparing the edge retention and toughness at the same time, MagnaMax also looks excellent on the chart:

With similar edge retention to S110V but substantially higher toughness, the property balance is much better than previous stainless PM steels. This datapoint is for 62 Rc, it could be a bit higher for edge retention at the cost of some toughness at higher hardness. You will notice that in the past, if you wanted higher edge retention than MagnaCut or S35VN, there was a steep drop off in toughness, and the toughness was relatively flat with higher levels of edge retention from there. MagnaMax has similar toughness to S35VN but with much greater edge retention, also highlighting its well-balanced properties. Comparing with the popular M390, MagnaMax is a significant improvement in both toughness and edge retention. Previously this combination of toughness and edge retention was only available in non-stainless powder metallurgy steels.
Microstructure
MagnaMax gets those excellent properties by achieving a very fine carbide structure made up of hard vanadium and niobium carbides. It has a similar amount of carbide to K390, with a somewhat finer carbide size:

MagnaMax

K390
MagnaMax has about 16% carbide volume, which is roughly double MagnaCut. This is why MagnaMax has so much greater wear resistance and slicing edge retention:

MagnaCut
MagnaMax has so much greater toughness than previous high edge retention stainless PM steels because its carbide volume is much lower and the carbides are much smaller. Chromium carbides are relatively large in powder metallurgy steels, so eliminating them from the microstructure gives much better toughness. Notice how big the carbides are in M390:

M390

S90V

S110V
Corrosion Resistance
One of the things that made MagnaCut popular was that its corrosion resistance was surprisingly excellent, better than most other stainless knife steels. I compared its corrosion resistance to other high edge retention stainless steels with my standard 1% saltwater test:

M390 and S110V actually have pretty good corrosion resistance, I had previously given both a “9” in my knife steel ratings. So it isn’t surprising that both of those grades had only a few small rust spots in this test. S90V has worse corrosion resistance and had significant rusting. MagnaMax, however, showed no rust spots in this test.
The Long, Long Development
MagnaMax has been a long time coming. As I said in the intro section, I first proposed it in 2019. We made the first heat with Crucible Steel in 2023. Crucible made a second heat right before their bankruptcy. The first heat was used by a few knifemakers and knife companies but did not have a name yet. So the companies called it different things like MagnaX, ProjectX, etc. That second heat did not provide as much information for dialing in the composition as I had hoped as they overshot the carbon target but a sizeable margin. This heat was primarily sold to Spyderco for their mule series of knives. These knives are a good representation of the steel’s properties, though the high carbon means that the corrosion resistance is lower for that prototype steel than the final versions. It’s still very good corrosion resistance, but not as good as it could have been. Once we have more representations of the final material for testing I will be doing further work like developing final datasheets and ensuring that all of the element targets yield consistent properties even when they are on the lower end or upper end of their allowable ranges. There are a lot more heat treatment combinations I need to test to optimize recommendations so that the material has its best possible combinations of hardness, edge retention, toughness, and corrosion resistance.
Wide Release Date
As I explained above, it is a bit difficult to say what the release date of MagnaMax is/was. In some ways it has already been released. However, the steel has not been given a final, wide release when it can be regularly purchased. There are many pounds of MagnaMax ingots being delivered over the next few months, from our dual powder steel suppliers of Erasteel and Carpenter. The official release date will be some time in Q2 of this year (2026).
Summary
MagnaMax maintains the excellent corrosion resistance and hardness of MagnaCut, while significantly improving its wear resistance and edge retention. This means it took a small cut in toughness, of course. MagnaMax matches the toughness-edge retention balance of K390, which has been popular in Spyderco folders recently. I think this is a sweet spot for performance for a wide range of knives that benefit from high edge retention. I’m excited to see what kinds of knives MagnaMax ends up in.

Where do I buy some?
Proud of your continued dedication to this.
for my own data, it is the perfect steel for a diving knife and tactical of course I see no reason not to use it in kitchen knives. here I should mention that my favorite steel was s90v. which of course was completely unsuitable for a diving knife. I think we have the perfect steel for all uses
Just when I thought it was safe to . . . HA! HA!
Seriously, this is great news. It’s just amazing how materials science has advanced in such a relatively short time.
I look forward to being an early adopter even though my knives rarely leave my pocket.
well, damn! looks like you did it again, larrin – congratulations! can’t wait to hear more about it. 🙂
for the longest time, i had lusted after a woodcarving knife blade of vanadis 8 – i guess that is about to change. (and given that i have seen the occasional toolmaker make magnacut carving knife blades, there might even be a higher chance for a magnamax one…)
I’ve been extremely impressed by the Magnacut on my Leatherman Arc (my favorite steel is s90V but I need the pliers functionality). This is exciting news.
I work with cardboard inside a Costco,
5 days per week – on corporate staff of a “quasi vendor”, it’s unique to Alaska.
When I’m not at work I’ve become so used to carrying the Arc that I have it on me at most times. I keep the Magnacut nicely honed.
The ability to touch up Magnacut greatly exceeds s90V which I find much more difficult to work with given the extremely high volume of vanadium carbides.
I’d pay for an upgraded Leatherman. I hope they’re following along!
Nice work and thank you for keeping us knife steel nerds in the loop on the behind the scenes. I truly believe you are the one connecting to us in the “field” who actually use these improved tools.
Congrats Larrin!! So exciting!
Exceptional combination of High Chromium in solution, Small grain and carbide size, High Carbide volume, Free of Chromium carbide makes possible to achieve ease of grind, Rust free, Extrime edge retention simultaneously. With fully optimized HT, I can’t even imagine how further it’s peaks can go!
Extrime -> Extreme
When and where will this be available?
Looks great.
Any indication when the steel will be available in Europe?
Holy shit. You’ve done it again larrin. One knife nerd pushing the boundaries of material science.
Truly well done.
I would not be surprised if in a decade you invented a knife steel in a decade that’s literally adamantium 😂. Infinite toughness and hardness. The stuff you have already came out with is leagues ahead of any other steel, and I wonder if you can push even harder into the edge retention category in the future. Maybe a tougher better variation of the 15v class
Amazing how when everything is a tradeoff you somehow manage to always make these steels that outperform the leaders in whatever goal you’re aiming for while still maintaining a comparable level of every other property to industry standards. I guess Alchemy is real after all. Turns out having the largest website about knife steels is the advertisement cheat code as well.
I‘m excited to see the hardness potential. I‘m all about kitchen knives. People use SC2 all day without having breakouts, so I think MagnaMax close to it‘s maximum hardness potential will still be plenty though.
Very exciting. I hope to see it soon in the production knife world. Can you comment on it sharpenability?