If the KAI blades are sharpened by cold working rather than grinding/honing, that might explain why they do not work well for me. I do not find them to be either sharp enough for my beard, nor smooth enough for my face.
I also have a collection of straight razors. I like to hone them on a series of stones finishing with a Suehiro Gokumyo 20K grit (0.5 micron) synthetic stone. Then I polish the edge using 0.5, 0.25 and 0.1 micron cubic boron nitride pasted strops. Many people can shave off of an 8K Norton synthetic or a Belgian Coticule, but I find such edges to be dull and rough.
When I first started using the pasted strops, I did not have the G20K hone and only had the 0.5 micron strop. When I added the 0.25 micron strop, I could easily tell the edge was improved. When I added the 0.1 micron strop, I did not think it would make a difference. While the difference is not great, my skin is sensitive enough to feel the difference. However, it is impossible to see a difference, even under magnification. Anything under 0.5 micron is mirror polished as that is the approximate wavelength of visible light. I would take a scanning electron microscope to differentiate the difference in edges.
I also have a collection of straight razors. I like to hone them on a series of stones finishing with a Suehiro Gokumyo 20K grit (0.5 micron) synthetic stone. Then I polish the edge using 0.5, 0.25 and 0.1 micron cubic boron nitride pasted strops. Many people can shave off of an 8K Norton synthetic or a Belgian Coticule, but I find such edges to be dull and rough.
When I first started using the pasted strops, I did not have the G20K hone and only had the 0.5 micron strop. When I added the 0.25 micron strop, I could easily tell the edge was improved. When I added the 0.1 micron strop, I did not think it would make a difference. While the difference is not great, my skin is sensitive enough to feel the difference. However, it is impossible to see a difference, even under magnification. Anything under 0.5 micron is mirror polished as that is the approximate wavelength of visible light. I would take a scanning electron microscope to differentiate the difference in edges.