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You already have several knives that should handle tomatoes with ease. The chef knives and the larger petty should do the job. What is your sharpening routine?As far as nakiris, they do a great job both slicing and dicing. One of my least expensive knives is a Tojiro White #2 nakiri... it gets screaming sharp and works very well. This knife will do any of the one handed trick cuts you can pull up on youtube. I think they're fifty bucks. Takes a great edge, but doesn't hold it long- needs stropping if you use it all day.
Your EdgePro takes all the guesswork out of it. If you can go to up to 4000 grit, all your knives will slice tomatoes. Take it up to 8000K and they cut to the touch. Strop with leather and diamond spray and they just fall into little bits when the tomato sees the knife coming. I also use an EdgePro when the knives get dull, but I touch up with a 5000 Shapton to a 15K Shapton, or strop on leather.... and tomatoes are usually what tell me it's time to touch up..
I haven't ventured down the path of sharpening - I'm intimidated by it and looks like it requires a skill set I don't have. I bought the Tojiro Pro sharpener
Incoming. Purchased a set of Kochi knives from John Broida @ Japanese Knife Imports in LA. Looking forward to wet stone knife sharpening on these high quality knives. They'll be replacing my aging Tojori stainless knife set.NB