Steel Deep-Dive · Knives

154CM: The American Classic That Built Benchmade's Reputation

Easy to sharpen, genuinely tough, and the steel behind decades of the best American production folders.
By CarryIndex · May 2026 · Updated from live catalog
59–61
HRC Range
★★★☆☆
Edge Retention
★★★★☆
Corrosion Resist.
★★★★☆
Toughness

154CM is an American stainless steel that defined the premium production knife market from the late 1970s through the 1990s. Developed by Crucible Industries as a high-performance stainless alloy for aerospace and industrial applications, it was adopted by early American custom knifemakers as an alternative to 440C — offering better toughness and improved edge retention in a comparable stainless package.

Benchmade built much of their reputation on 154CM. If you've carried an older Benchmade — a 940, a 551 Griptilian, a 707 Sequel — you've likely carried 154CM. It was the steel that said "this is a serious knife" before CPM grades existed, and it earned that reputation through decades of reliable performance.

Composition

Carbon 1.05% · Chromium 14.00% · Molybdenum 4.00% · Manganese 0.50%. The high molybdenum content (4%) is distinctive — moly improves hardenability, toughness, and corrosion resistance simultaneously. Carbon at 1.05% is lower than S30V or D2, which is why 154CM's edge retention is good but not exceptional at equivalent hardness. At the 59–61 HRC it's typically run, toughness is excellent — notably better than VG-10 at the same hardness.

What it's actually like to carry

154CM is a friendly steel. It sharpens easily — more easily than S30V or S35VN — and produces a refined edge on basic equipment. It doesn't hold that edge as long as CPM steels, but the interval between sharpenings is perfectly adequate for EDC: weeks or months depending on use. The corrosion resistance is solid for a 14% chromium steel — essentially maintenance-free in non-maritime environments.

ATS-34, often mentioned in the same breath as 154CM, is a Japanese-produced steel with virtually identical composition made by Hitachi. The two are functionally equivalent; the difference is country of origin and production tolerances. If a knife is listed as ATS-34, treat it as 154CM-equivalent.

Where it sits in the hierarchy

154CM occupies an interesting position today: it's a legitimate premium steel that's been somewhat overtaken by S35VN in the production knife market, yet it's not a step down if you find it in a knife you want. Benchmade still uses it in select models. For its particular combination of easy sharpening, good toughness, and adequate edge retention, it has a loyal following among people who prioritize the sharpening experience over maximum edge-holding time.

154CM vs. Adjacent Steels
SteelHRCEdge RetentionToughnessCorrosion Resist.Sharpenability
440C57–60GoodGoodGoodEasy
154CM / ATS-3459–61GoodVery GoodVery GoodEasy
VG-1060–62Very GoodGoodExcellentMedium
CPM-S30V59–61Very GoodGoodVery GoodEasy–Medium
CPM-S35VN62–64Very GoodVery GoodVery GoodEasy–Medium
◆ CarryIndex Verdict
Buy a knife in 154CM when: you want a classic Benchmade or a well-made American production knife in a steel that sharpens effortlessly, you prioritize toughness over maximum edge retention, or you're buying on the secondary market where 154CM Benchmades represent exceptional value for the quality of construction and steel.

Consider alternatives when: edge retention is your primary metric — S35VN holds longer at comparable hardness. For new production purchases where the choice is between 154CM and S35VN at the same price, S35VN is the better technical choice. But if you find a knife you love in 154CM, don't pass on it: it is a capable, proven, and genuinely good steel.