San Mai / Damascus vs Aogami Super

Detailed metallurgical comparison between Three-Layer / Pattern Steel and Super Blue Steel.

DAMASCUS-SAN-MAI

San Mai / Damascus

Three-Layer / Pattern Steel

San Mai ('three-layer') is the classic Japanese lamination: a hard carbon steel core (hagane) forge-welded between two layers of softer iron or steel (jigane). This produces a blade that takes a razor edge while the body provides toughness to resist chipping. Damascus refers to visible pattern-welded variants with dozens of alternating layers. Both traditions originate in functional necessity; the patterns visible in polished Damascus are a by-product of functional metallurgy, not decoration.

coreVaries (typically Shirogami or Aogami)claddingSoft iron or stainless
Sharpness
9
Edge Retention
8
Ease of Sharpening
8
Rust Resistance
5
AOGAMI-SUPER

Aogami Super

Super Blue Steel

The highest-carbon variant among Aogami steels. Includes vanadium and molybdenum for extreme edge retention and hardness. Revered and feared in equal measure — its edge outlasts almost everything, but requires a master's touch to sharpen properly. The pinnacle of the Hitachi carbon steel family.

carbon1.40–1.50%chromium0.30–0.50%tungsten2.00–2.50%vanadium0.30–0.50%molybdenum0.30–0.52%
Sharpness
9
Edge Retention
10
Ease of Sharpening
5
Rust Resistance
4