Why is T10 steel considered a premium choice for Japanese sword collectibles?
Updated Feb 2026
T10 steel - also designated T10 tool steel or T10 carbon steel - is a high-carbon steel grade that is highly regarded in Japanese sword collecting for two specific qualities: its fine grain structure and its exceptional suitability for differential heat treatment. The fine grain in T10 is a result of the steel's controlled alloy composition, which limits impurities that would disrupt grain uniformity. This fine grain produces a blade surface that polishes to a particularly clear and refined finish, revealing the steel's character in a way that courser-grained high-carbon steels cannot match. The differential heat treatment capability is the quality that most distinguishes T10 from other carbon steel grades for collectors: by applying clay differentially to the blade before the final quenching step, the heated blade cools at different rates along its length, producing a hard edge zone and a softer spine zone - and, crucially, the visible hamon temper line at the boundary between the two zones. This hamon is one of the most prized visual features in Japanese sword collecting.