





🪒 Sharpen your edge, sharpen your life — never miss a cut!
The SHARPAL 105N is a compact, tungsten carbide blade sharpener engineered for professionals and enthusiasts alike. Designed to restore and hone a wide range of cutting tools—from knives and pruners to axes and lawn mower blades—this pocket-friendly sharpener combines durability, comfort, and precision. With a soft grip handle, pen clip, and lanyard hole, it’s built for on-the-go use. Trusted globally and backed by a 3-year warranty, it’s the ultimate tool to keep your blades razor-sharp and ready.



















| ASIN | B01L8VKZO0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #10,124 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #40 in Knife Sharpeners |
| Brand | SHARPAL |
| Brand Name | SHARPAL |
| Color | Black/Orange |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 5,458 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00814744020046 |
| Grit Type | Medium |
| Included Components | Multipurpose Sharpening Tool |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 5.31"L x 1.18"W x 0.59"H |
| Item Type Name | fixed blade,hunting knife,outdoor,camping |
| Item Weight | 55 Grams |
| Manufacturer | SHARPAL INC |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | Manufacturer Warranty |
| Material | Tungsten Carbide |
| Material Type | Tungsten Carbide |
| Product Dimensions | 5.31"L x 1.18"W x 0.59"H |
| UPC | 814744020046 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
N**E
YOU WILL NOT FIND A BETTER FEROCIUM ROD STRIKER - YOU REALLY WON'T
I bought this to try as a ferocium rod (fire steel) striker. I've tried many strikers over the years, from the cheap ones some rods come with and their upgrades, to various tools like hacksaw blades and "whatever works", and of course the spines of many knives crafted from many metals (carbon, stainless, powered-metallurgy super steels, etc.). I also bought this carbon sharpener alongside a few other "carbide" sharpeners that were less expensive, to see if I could get the performance while saving a few bucks. Long story short, for use as a fero rod striker while starting fires, nothing, and I mean nothing, even came close to the level of performance I get while using this. To start with the business end of it - the carbide - it's of exceptional quality and the edges are perfectly squared off - perfect for stricking a rod. I used to think that a 1/2" fero rod would pretty much last forever. But, that was when I used all of the other things to strike rods. This thing slices off a visible and palpable layer of fero. And it doesn't go to waste! It throws down legit gobs molten, sparkish fero even from a cheap rods, that continue to combust for up to a few seconds (a good rod doesn't have to be expensive. I have great experiences with some of the cheap ones on Amazon). Don't get me wrong - a 1/2" x 6 rode will still last longer than most would ever survive in the wilderness (or maybe a hundred fires overall, dending on how well you start fires). The carbide is visibly of much higher quality than the cheaper carbide strikers you see on amazon (with the rubber handle). And no knife steel I've encountered (which is many) comes close, even considering those with great handles that allow you to really put your shoulder into it - this does more, with less effort. After I purposely was heavy-handed with it for a number of fires and my 3-year old picked it up and scraped it on things (mimicking what he saw me doing). I could see some burn resin on it, as usual, though I was able to clean it back to a mirror shine with mostly just my finger, then a couple wipes with a shirt and it looked brand new, the edge was still just as squared as the other edge that I hadn't used. I then used it to sharpen my knife, which it did an impressive job at - and the carbide still held its edge. Apart from the carbide - which again is just amazing and completely worth the few extra bucks. The ergonomics are fantastic and you can get a whole-hand grip (great any time, but especially in the bitter and windy cold, when you're fingers and hands are begining to lose strength). Yes, the cap is pretty tight and takes a surprising amount of effort to remove, though it's not like trying to lift Thor's hammer and some people really just complain too much. Do you want the very best performance with what the tool is actually designed to do, or will you let a cap make you compromise with something that's a liability? The carbide is so strong and not brittle that you could probably just leave the cap, though I prefer to not take chances and know my gear will be serviceable when I need it, whether that be starting a fire in the back yard, or elsewhere. Anways, get this if you want to use it as a striker. It's amazing. Really it is. You won't find anything better suited to the task.
T**O
Great pocket sharpener !!!
Works perfect. Highly recommended!!!
B**R
Easy to use and works great!
This little sharpener is a great tool for kitchen, garden and garage. I had a pair of pruning shears that I was ready to throw away, and this little guy was able to get the right angle, sharpen the blades and salvage the tool for me. The cap doesn't fit, which is the only reason I didn't give 5 stars.
M**K
See update at end. No longer 1st choice.
I'm a beginner glass blower. I work with glass tubes and the first thing I found I needed, after a torch, was a tungsten carbide 'scoring knife', to make a scratch that would, when stressed by bending, grow to a crack around the entire circumference of a tube. That it all happens in a split second as a "snap' belies the genius of using a single small scratch (a miniature crack) as a focal point for the stress of bending the tube and knowing, with certainty. that the brittle glass tube will release the internal stress of bending, all at once, by extending that crack (scratch) circumferentially along the shortest path possible, thereby adhering to the rule that material processes involving a change in energy state will occur along the path of least resistance. A tungsten carbide knife was recommended, but the ones sold by the glass suppliers I used were rather pricey. I (wrongly) assumed that the words "tungsten carbide" referred to an alloy of steel and tungsten, augmented by carbon. I bought triangular files and the strongest hacksaw blades. I quickly dulled many triangular files and strong hacksaw blades. I extrapolated (again wrongly) that: if a small scratch works to initiate a crack, a bigger scratch, even all the way around, will do the best job of 'showing the glass the path it aught to take’. I got a glass tubing cutter; a hinged jaw sort of device, with a broad V on one jaw (in which to hold the glass straight and steady), and a scoring/cutting wheel at the end of the other jaw. It is very difficult to get the path the scoring wheel takes to return to the exact line on which it started. The ever-present minute irregularities in glass and the loose tolerances in the device prevent perfect alignment, which leads to a spiral trace. Not too soon, I realized that I was creating a whole line of microscopic scratches along which path the force releasing crack could, and would, veer off from my idea of a clean cut, or the perfect path it would have followed straight around the tube from a small scratch, had I not interfered. The relatively broad line of hacksaw blade or file only provided more, and more 'attractive' microscopic cracks to steer the cleaving crack away from a 'clean cut' line. I'd heard of different ways induce thermal stress (as opposed to bending stress) to create a line of omni directional cracks that would then be joined all at once by a large thermal shock or by continuing to tap the starter scratch edges or thermal shock small sections. I liked idea of using of low voltage DC current to create red hot resistance wire (NiCrFe alloy wire) to extend a scratch or blast the glass in half with a surge of white-hot heat without a starting scratch. I started with burning strings and old glass jars. Then I tried extending a starter scratch with a 140W soldering gun. The best result came from using a scratch all the way around the tube, chilling it in iced water, then heating the scratch (both round & round, and in sections) with my new narrow flame propane torch ((Flame King YSNAX1-001 Multi-Purpose Pencil Propane Torch Head) then plunging it in ice water. Experience said that the best results came from the cleanest straightest scratches. I'd avoided buying a WC — elemental symbols for tungsten (wolfram) & carbon— scoring knife because they were expensive. Then I saw one glass supplier show a Speedy Sharp sharpening tool as a replacement for a scoring knife that had gone out of production. I had previously thought these steel-on-steel sharpeners merely sharpened by straightening a knife's dinged up edge, not grinding a new one. However, the carbide sharpeners I was now seeing in use appeared to shave metal off a worn edge better than grinding. Then I learned about tungsten carbide being a compound unto itself, and the hardest thing around. I was all set to get the Speedy Sharp when I discovered, on other Amazon pages, the same knife, with no brand name for 30% less. Finally, I spotted the Sharpal. I saw it had 5 times the amount of carbide (WC), a larger contact surface, a textured rounded end for smoothing, a larger, more ergonomic handle and was still a buck cheaper than the Speedy Sharp. I bought one and in one day have sharpened all the knives and other edges I have been avoiding because the work is so time consuming. I like using a whetstone. I learned about knives in Boy Scouts from a Scout Master whose family, for generations, has been bladesmiths. His standing offer was that for anyone, achieving Eagle Scout grade he would create (forge, grind and temper) a Bowie knife from any file (any size) you could bring him. In my area (where Lake Michigan Meets Indiana) Bethlehem Steel and Pullman Boxcar Factory were the largest, among many, industries fabricating steel and worn out large metal files (~2’ long) were in abundance. His sharpening instructions were simple. You just have to see an edge angle (16°-20°), hold that angel and start with circular grinding (12 circles each side), moving from hilt to tip, now repeat on the other side of the blade. Continue working alternate sides until all portions of the blade are sharp (blade will 'catch', not slide, when moved sideways across your thumbnail). Then stroke the blade on the stone as if slicing a thin layer of material from the stone (scrupulously keeping the same edge angle). Switch sides with each stroke. Finish with one steeply angled stroke on each side—to remove any thin-film burr created — the harder the steel, the more likely a burr will develop. Paramount is keeping the angle exactly the same (much easier said than done). With well dulled blades, it can take me up to 30 minutes and require several whetstones of different grit grade. Procrastinating the job makes it even more tedious, in the end. The Sharpal is wizard fast. It quickly shaves even my hardest knives to a nice edge in 10 strokes or less. Admittedly, a little work with a fine whetstone would result in perfection. Even without that, my knives, scissors, utility knives, box cutters, wood planes, side cutting pliers, shovel, Pulaski, brush hook, axe and cuticle nippers are now all sharper than since they were new. Anybody would love this as a gift. I’m certain I’ll be converting some friends and family from naysayers to enthusiasts of this tool. P.S. The cap is not a problem. The ad should have explained it better. They used the right words, but showed too little detail to convey the opening procedure technique The cap can be loosened grasping it firmly at its top, then rocking it foreward and back, in line with the long sides (first push forward, then pull back). Just wiggling it won’t do it, firm full-range motions are needed. At first, it may take a several of these cycles to get appreciable lift. Each movement can be seen to raise it a bit. Eventually it will clear the restricting snaps and lift off with a twisting motion. After 10 -20 removals it won’t seat as tightly. but it still may need a push or 2 to pull it off without gorilla strength. I have arthritic hands and have lost a lot of my grip. I have no cap trouble since wearing it down with 1 min of on-off-on-off cycling. UPDATE: 1.14.24 The carbide bit fell out a few weeks after purchase. The comfortable handle gave such a good grip that normal use applied enough torque to loosen handle and the bit fell out. I was surprised to see how little of the bit extended into the handle (~0.5"). I kept it and used hot glue gun to stick it back in place. but it's still a little loose. Sharpenall has carbide cutting surface attached to steel shank that extends all the way to the bottom of the handle.
J**R
Works Well, BUT Diagram Mislabeled
For instructions on proper use, watch the video on manufacturers website, Sharpal.com or go to Youtube and search for "Sharpal 105N". Amazon description includes a diagram with the edges labeled Quick Edge and Fine Honing, but they are reversed! The mirrored 90-degree edge should be labelled Quick Edge and the rounded side is for Fine Honing. I wonder how many have used that diagram as their reference after they received their purchase? The 105 works very well for what it’s meant to do. The convenient form factor makes it ideal for large single and double-edged, lawn and garden blade. It can take a dull, nicked edge and return it to a very usable blade at low cost and right when you need it.
G**K
Great, but unexpectedly fragile
After a little less than a year, there are some chips in the carbide. Don't know how this happened -- am generally a careful person and *only* used to sharpen kitchen knives and scissors, touch up utility knife razors. No garden equipment. Guessing this might have happened with some old Japanese kitchen knives with chipped blades (Japanese knives have harder steel). Still possible to use a good carbide edge left-handed (since I'm a little ambidextrous). Because there is no preset edge angle, can be used to sharpen blades with any degree. Need.a steady hand to maintain existing angle and light pressure. Rough use will remove too much blade material.
H**R
I'm in love
I have every knife sharpener you can think of. I had something similar called the speedy shape and had no luck with it. This is much better. After pulling this out I sharpened 3 kitchen knives and this is outstanding. I love that it has a honing rod on it (honing rods don't sharpen it only straightens the edge) us the corner on the edge. It took only about 1-2 minutes to get a sharpening rhythm going. With the slim profile and low price and ease of use this is a real winner. No need to buy several different grits you simply use less pressure. If you have experience sharpening knives you will know that the corner edge of this can easily sharpen serrated edge knives as well without any problem. This is almost a one and done tool. But for me time will tell I can say that I'm really glad that I bought this. If your starting out sharping knives this might be all that you need. You can also get metal file for the really hard knives that just don't work with the system and you need to take off a lot of metal in order to reshape the edge. This tool might do that not sure yet. Good luck and happy sharpening!!
M**E
Forget the cap.
Fortunately, the cap was loose when I first opened the package. So, this little sucker sharpens in just a few swipes on a knife. The honing part, well, I haven’t got the hang of that yet; but with the razor edge I got in no time, who needs to hone, anyway. The cap fitment is another matter. I don’t see how anyone with small hands can get this cap off without pliers, or wedging a screwdriver in the crack between the cap and sharpener. If you can do a one-handed pull-up, using only your thumb and forefinger, you have no worries. But most of us cannot perform this miracle. My advice, don’t seat the cap all the way, unless your name is Joe-Herc. And if you don’t seat it fully, then what’s the point of capping it? The cap will likely fall off if you attach a lanyard. Whatever. The tool sharpens extremely well. If you want a quick razor edge, this one is for you. Who knows? Perhaps the manufacturer will see enough of these cap-fit complaints, and redesign it. I would have given five stars, if not for the cap.
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