Just followed Tom's like to HF purchased all three kitchen ceramics.
3" 5.99
5" 9.99
6" 12.99
Actually purchased 2 of each. Total shipping 9.99 and a 3.50 tax.
Don't know how these will hold up. Purchased two sets not because I expect them to fail quickly, but because the price is so good they are a good buy for replacement even if the first set lasts 10 years.
These are great slicing kitchen knives. No chopping or stabbing allowed. Find your steel butter knife if you need a screwdriver.
I have used these for years. Boker made a nice black bladed set. I still have two of the Boker 3" blades and use them every day. The larger Bokers somehow got lost in a recent move, so I am going to try these as a cheaper replacement.
The 6" Boker would make effortless cuts across 1/2 inch steak by placing the tip on the cutting board and just drawing it across the steak. It would take two draws to cut a 3" diameter pork loin, this because the blade was too short to get a decent angle. It just lifted the tip off the board and left maybe 1/2 inch to do again. Extra pressure might handle it, but two quick light draws seem the better choice.....don't like force is knife work if it can be avoided..
At this price, give them a try.
I also keep a Warthog sharpener on the kitchen counter for steel knives.
http://www.harborfreight.com/general-merch/kitchen.htmlHonestly, a just sharpened steel knife does as good at thin tomato slices as the ceramic...but with a little more force and more "sawing". The sharpen steel does well on meat, but with the same increase in effort over ceramic
Basically, the ceramic cuts most things like by a quick light draw across it. More like scribing a line across it rather than the slicing (sawing) you do with steel.