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🔒 Keep Your Knives Sharp and Safe!
The Mercer Culinary Knife Guard is a 12-inch by 2-inch protective cover made from durable polystyrene, designed to ensure the safety and longevity of your knives. It fits blades sized 11-12 inches, making it perfect for various types of knives, and is easy to clean, catering to both professional chefs and home cooking enthusiasts.
C**️
A must have for kitchen cutlery.
These Mercer cutlery plastic knife covers are a hard flexible plastic that will keep sharp edges contained. They not only protect users from injury but also protect blades from dulling. If you keep your knives in a drawer or in a knife bag these covers are a must have. If a wrong size is ordered, they can be cut to size easily with a grinder, dremel, or hacksaw blade. I have purchased quite a number of these covers.
K**E
Great for road trips with cooking supplies
Input my carving knife in this when we travel to the lake house. Keeps it safe
K**Y
Protects knife
Protects knife edge and fits well
I**R
You need this for the Yanagi
Protects me and the knife. Just a plastic sheath, but about 3/32 - quite adequate, and it fits very tightly - it will not slip off accidentally. I highly recommend this as a safety device for the excellent and dangerously sharp Yanagi.
J**D
Very well build
Very good product
E**
Knife guard
It fits the knife, and keeps the edge safe
R**K
Protect myself, and my family from my knife
Love this cover it protects my knife from damage and people from getting damaged. Does what it’s supposed to do.
D**0
Exactly what I needed
My knives have been rattling around in a kitchen drawer, and I recently discovered that the blades should be protected. This knife Guard is wider than the knife blade width, but fits fine and doesn't slide off. It grips perfectly and I plan to buy more for the rest of my knives.
A**R
Scratches knives
its a tight clamp, which is not really an issue if inserted edge side (not tip first). My problem is for some reason it scratches the blades surface. i was using Mercer's Renaissance 8 inch chef knife and for their knife guard to scratch their own product, clearly not well designed. i ended up having to cut out a piece of a reusable grocery bag and tape it into the knife guard to make it usable.Do not buy unless you are willing to DIY abit.
A**.
Cumple su objetivo
Si sirve
N**N
The Guard That Needs a Guard!
I wasn't quite sure what to expect from the mysterious black rectangle-thingy of a photo, but the price was right, so I bought two. Well, that was two mistakes.See, I like my knives, and I especially like them sharp. So sharp, indeed, that the term "nano-edged cutting surface" would apply to how I like my knives, which are usually Japanese and cost well over $200 each, along with their whetstones, which also hover in that price range.So I want only the best of edge protectors, of which these are not.Here is why they are not:There are edge protectors out there which I will look for as soon as I have finished typing this review. At no time does any surface of these protectors -- which in my memory are hinged, semi-transparent PVC shaped affairs that follow a bit roughly the curvature of the knife -- be it a 9.5" chef's or some other variation -- and they snap neatly shut on either side of the blade.If you were to drop the knife with this kind of protector on it -- gods forbid -- all that would hopefully occur is that the pointy end of the PVC might get cracked, or something similar. I can't think of a way that the enclosed knife -- securely locked up tight with hinged hasps -- could leap free and stab you in the foot.But these "protectors" -- where to start. Well, I'll start with the observation that they aren't intuitive. They don't exactly need a manual, but you kind of have to look quite hard to see how to insert -- slide? Push? your precious $250 Kasumi blade into this thing. It turns out that first you have to guess which way to insert the knife in between the two halves of the black sleeve; blade facing up or down? Trust me, it's not obvious.But woe betide you if your hand(s) are wet. I can visualize the trauma and the trip to ER: you, cursing as you try to align your nano-sharp blade with the incision in the featureless black plastic, only to slide right past it with a frustrated lunge that neatly removes the tips of your thumb and forefingers in one neat slice. In my mind's eye, this is not only possible, but highly probable, wet or not. One false move and it's a trip to ER, at least with one of my knives.If you do manage to get the tip of the knife in between the two halves of the guard, you have to exert an unnecessary amount of effort to slide the knife all the way in. And while you are doing this, nano-slivers of knife are being rubbed off the blade. Don't laugh: I saw this happen just this very day, when I took delivery of a brand-new Kasumi Damascus-steel 9.5" chef's knife, its blade unsullied by anything except the last soft polishing of the leather strop that was undoubtedly used by some craftsman in Seki, Japan. After sliding the knife into this knife guard and then withdrawing it, there were burnish marks all along the mirror-sheen blade -- not damaging once, perhaps, but would you want your shaving razor to be blunted a little every time you set it down? It's unacceptable for something that purports to guard a product to actually inflict damage on that product.For your new Bobby Flay knife set from Walmart, this is a great knife guard. But if you value your knives, and more importantly, your limbs, you will avoid these things like you would wasps' nests.Back these go where they came from.
C**N
Bon produit
Très pratique
P**R
Ridiculous for M22612 at least
I bought this for the Mercer Culinary M22612 Millennia 12" Chef Knife, as that was supposed to be the fitting guard. Unless either my knife or my guard had a manufacturing flaw, marketing these as fitting is ridiculous.First, the guard has a single closed side. It's supposed to guard a super sharp and pointy knife, but only the blade side is closed. All of the rest is open. Secondly, it's too small. No matter how you put it, it's not large enough to fit the base, and most importantly, it's not long enough to fit the whole knife's length when fully inserted. So what happens when you combine such flaws? The tip of the knife exceeds a bit! It's not even a square centimetre, but that makes it that much harder to realize that the most dangerous part of the knife is uncovered!Nothing life-threatening, but an unforgivable recipe for disaster - either harm or breaking the part of the knife which is most fragile, or the place where you store it. I returned mine... and the knife, since the M22612 is just too large to find an alternative. Don't buy, at least for the M22612.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
1 week ago