I've never understood the "easy to sharpen" claim.... especially since I find knives with regular grinds to be quite easy to sharpen anyway.
To sharpen a Scandinavian grind, you have to remove a LOT of metal. A LOT. The edge is HUGE. I would dread the day my knife edge got a nick in it. OH how much metal would have to be ground off to reestablish the edge!
For woodcarving (it's almost a chisel edge) it would be good since you can lay the edge against the wood and get it to "bite" easy. Or, of course, if you're using it for a splitting wedge and pounding on the back of it with a mallet.... Otherwise, it seems VERY impractical to me. I have one of the Mora knives and a couple of other blades, and the knife is neat and all, but I don't really use it much since I'm afraid of having to resharpen it! :haha: I've actually considered grinding the sides of the blade down to get rid of some of that ridiculously wide edge (and some of the way-too-thickness), making it more of an ordinary flat or even hollow grind, which would make it a vastly more useful blade for me. I know they're all the rage now, but the Scandinavian grind just isn't for me. :wink: