The vanadium carbides in MagnaCut are 1-2 microns and the niobium carbides are even finer. For comparison DMTs finest diamond lapping compound is 1 micron. DMTs extra fine diamond stone is 3 microns.
Carbides will be crushed using a water stone and become part of the swarf. Exposed carbides at the edge add in edge retention, though very keen edges are made up from the steel and not carbides, even when diamonds are used.
Burnishing also plays a roll and will shape metal with much softer material, such as an unloaded linen strop.
Further, the inventor of Magnacut documents reports of the Shapton stones sharpening it better than DMT diamond or CBN stones.
The carbide making water stones not work both flys in the face of experience and what is known about how edges are shaped from electron microscope. It is a pretty theory though.
It’s true that the carbides in magnacut are very fine relative other steels and that’s one of the reasons it takes a keen edge and exhibits excellent edge stability.
It’s also the case that I only have two magnacut knives and I don’t use them that much. The most I’ve done in one trip with my James Sponaugle was six deer and I never noticed any loss of cutting aggression. The other is the benchmade fillet knife but I’ve got a Phil Wilson filleting knife that does all the heavy lifting around here so it’s seen very little use.
My personal progression from naniwa stones to DMT started with steels that have much larger carbides like D2, S30v, S90v and S110v along with some m390 etc. and the change in edge retention was noticeable. I’ve been using DMT stones longer than magnacut has existed so that’s the only way I’ve sharpened it. In other words, I’ve never tried to use a softer sharpening media on magnacut.
Now as for what you’re trying to say. Maybe to some of it but all of it reads to me like a form of confirmation bias where your choosing to believe what you want because it suites your purpose. I’ve read Larrins reports on his steel and even read the OG report where he presented his new steel to the world and said that Devin Thomas had success sharpening on shapton stones.
That doesn’t change anything in my mind. I can’t imagine a world where I would intentionally sharpen my knives with a media that’s softer than what’s in the blade. I prefer to cut my apex. I mean the steel matrix and the carbides. Burnishing the edge may feel sharp but it’s not good for wear resistance. Could be why I can run through six to ten animals and still shave my arm when I’m done and your not seeing the same performance.
I also don’t have any use for an edge refined to 4 um like your 5k stone is doing. I stop around 45 um, then 3 or 4 passes at 25 um to refine the edge a shade and a couple 3 or 4 passes on a strop loaded with 5 um diamond. I want refined teeth left in my blade. It’ll pop arm hair and it’ll still be cutting long after a finely refined blade has given up or plugged with fat and grease.
Anyway, you do you. I hope you find some success with burr removal. If not, maybe consider your sharpening media.