Dick Red Series Honing Steel 30.5cm Knife Sharpening Rod
Product Description
The Dick Red Series honing steel is a 30.5cm oval-section rod designed for routine blade maintenance in professional kitchens. Its purpose is to realign a knife's edge between sharpenings —...
Specifications
- Blade length
- 11.75
- Colour
- Red
- Dimensions
- 12(L)"
- Finish
- Chrome Plated
Downloads
Product Description
The Dick Red Series honing steel is a 30.5cm oval-section rod designed for routine blade maintenance in professional kitchens. Its purpose is to realign a knife's edge between sharpenings — not to remove metal — keeping blades performing consistently without interrupting service to reach for a stone or machine. Dick is a well-regarded German knife and steel manufacturer, and the Red Series sits comfortably within their professional range.
In a working kitchen, blade maintenance tends to slip under pressure. Keeping a honing steel at the prep station or pass means a chef can true an edge in a few strokes before a busy section without breaking stride. The oval cross-section engages the blade at a more natural angle than a round rod, which tends to give more consistent results across different grip styles — a useful quality in a brigade where multiple chefs share the same maintenance tools.
Practical advantages for kitchen teams include:
- Oval profile encourages consistent blade angle during honing
- Ergonomic handle reduces hand fatigue with repeated daily use
- German steel construction holds up to continuous professional use
- Compact 12-inch working length suits most commercial chef's knives
- Lightweight enough for a knife roll or hanging at a prep station
There are no installation or power requirements — this is a hand tool requiring no setup. It is worth being clear that a honing steel will not recover a genuinely dull or chipped edge; a whetstone or mechanical sharpener is needed for that. This rod is most effective as part of a consistent maintenance routine alongside periodic proper sharpening.
Well suited to professional kitchens of any size, catering colleges, and brigade environments where knife maintenance discipline matters. If your kitchen sharpens at very high frequency or works with heavy-duty blades that take a harder edge, a coarser or longer steel may be worth considering.
If you are weighing up which steel fits your knives and usage habits, the team is happy to help you think it through.
Key Features
- Oval cross-section rod for consistent blade angle during honing
- 30.5cm working length suits standard commercial chef's knives
- German steel construction rated for continuous daily professional use
- Ergonomic handle designed to reduce fatigue during repeated strokes
- Lightweight 500g build suitable for knife roll or bench storage
Operational Benefits
- Keeps knife edges true throughout service without stopping to sharpen
- Oval profile reduces angle errors common with round honing rods
- Supports consistent knife performance across a shared brigade kitchen
- Compact form integrates easily into existing prep station workflow
- Reduces frequency of full sharpenings, extending overall blade life
Specifications
- Blade length
- 11.75
- Colour
- Red
- Dimensions
- 12(L)"
- Finish
- Chrome Plated
- Knife colour
- Red
- Knife length
- 11.75
- Knife origin
- European
- Knife type
- Knife Sharpener
- Material
- Steel
- Weight
- 500g
Downloads
Frequently Asked Questions
- Honing realigns the microscopic edge of a blade that has folded or rolled through use — it does not remove metal. Sharpening grinds away material to create a new edge. This steel handles honing only, so it is best used as part of a routine between proper sharpenings on a whetstone or mechanical sharpener. If a blade has become genuinely dull or has visible chips, honing alone will not recover it.
- Most professional kitchens benefit from chefs running their knives across a honing steel at the start of service and again mid-session during high-volume periods. The frequency depends on knife steel hardness and what is being cut — harder ingredients blunt an edge faster. Establishing a routine is more important than any fixed schedule, and keeping the steel accessible at the prep station encourages consistent use.
- This steel is well suited to most standard European-style chef's knives. Japanese knives and blades with higher-hardness steel require more care — an oval or smooth steel can still be used, but technique and angle control matter more, and some manufacturers recommend ceramic or fine-grit rods instead. If your kitchen runs predominantly Japanese-style knives, it is worth discussing the right maintenance tools before purchasing.