Pocketknives/Kitchen Knives/Fixed Blades
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Idk what it is, but no matter how much $$ I spend on knives, I'll always adore and revere Spyderco. Lovely piece @scarfmace. Always so much fun to flip those things open, too
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@Oaktavia I don't know how but I missed that story about your neighbour. I snort laughed, sorry
@scarfmace that tango is exactly the sort of thing I had in mind for my new knife. Lovely looking piece.
@Sage954 that looks to a wicked EDC job.
I made my purchase of a new knife that should meet the my desired specs of being corrosion resistant, outdoor friendly, robust, hardworking and heavyweight. The blade shape should work for both prying, chopping and slicing, food prep etc. Stabbing is at the bottom of the list, but it will do that too in a pinch.
I'm not letting on what it is until I have it in hand and can show some pics…
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So as I discussed a while back, while I love my Spyderco Para 3 it doesn’t do what I need it to in some areas of my life. Norway is wet a lot so keeping a steel vulnerable to corrosion dry when near lakes, the sea or under a seilene grey sky can be tricky. In addition when at the cabin or out in the sticks the Spidey comes up a bit lightweight. I also do rough food prep in these situations. When doing building or labour it is useful for a lot of things but there is a heavy duty work I need a knife for where I fear for the Para’s super hard bilde.
Finding one knife to meet all those needs would of course be tricky. I have some inexpensive hardware store blades for fishing, and one mid range fixed blade hunting knife too, so what I was after was something that could do heavy work, something I could take on my house renovation tasks, but also to the cabin. Chopping, hacking, slicing and prying were prioritised. Stabbing, not so much. I felt like a Sheepsfoot, Warncliffe or possibly a reverse tanto would work. Alternatively a heavy, broad blades drop point.
After a lot of research I went with a knife made by Fox called the Pelican. It is a fucking beast [emoji1] It is designed for heavy work, especially outdoors. It will manage a lot of tasks in my house reno work too.
The blade is a thick sheepsfoot that tapers late to a broad point. Great for chopping, prying and hacking, as well as heavy slicing. The long curved belly will mean it works for rustic food prep too. The steel is N690Co which has a suitable profile, not to hard, meaning not brittle either, decent corrosion resistance. I’m very pleased.
Poorly lit photos:
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That's such an awesome knife
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That’s a nice knife!
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Thanks guys.
It isn’t super flashy or elegant but it is a design suited to its purpose as a folder for heavy work. It comes in at twice the weight of my Para 3 with a blade nearly twice as long and almost half as thick.
I’m now looking forward to cleaning up and sharpening my Para 3 and giving it the gentler life for which it was designed. In the meantime I’m off to the woods with the Pelican [emoji1]
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Thanks guys.
It isn’t super flashy or elegant but it is a design suited to its purpose as a folder for heavy work. It comes in at twice the weight of my Para 3 with a blade nearly twice as long and almost half as thick.
I’m now looking forward to cleaning up and sharpening my Para 3 and giving it the gentler life for which it was designed. In the meantime I’m off to the woods with the Pelican [emoji1]
sounds like you could build your own cabin with that thing !!
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@neph93 that picture definitely makes me wish I had a kid. But they would definitely be batshit crazy if they were mine. Wed be out in the woods shooting guns right now.
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That's great!
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@neph93 That is one beautifull EDC!
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@neph93 That is one beautifull EDC!
Thank you!
Probably not an EDC in the true sense of the acronym. It is big and heavy and too chunky for a lot of small scale everyday tasks. But as an edc for those days I’m outdoors or working on the house it is perfect. I could hack through inch thick birch branches in seconds with minimal effort.
That being said it sat comfortably in the righthand back pocket of my IH-555-SST and was quick and easy to deploy from there.
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I thought the reference was Every Day Child. Lol.
Tho an EDCarry crossbow would be cool as hell. Especially for the silly rabbit.
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Hey @mikebarhoot have you ever run into a guy named Wayne Clifton from Florida at one of your knife shows? He's the US distributor for Due Buoi. They make some incredible switchblades…. I have 2 of them. I have my eye on a bone handled Damascus lever-lock from Mikov though. It is really pricey though. Like a pair of XHS pricey
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This is the due buoi
(Sorry for the low-res pic)And these are Mikov
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Ha! I have a Mikov with a standard blade that has scales similar to top knife in your posted image, @Filthy.
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