Bark River Bravo-1
Rat Cutlery RC-4
My 2cents
-JRJ
Bark River Bravo-1
Rat Cutlery RC-4
My 2cents
-JRJ
You are right, the bushman is made from a single sheet of metal (I don't know if it's carbon or stainless either), with the handle rolled to form a hollow. There is certainly more room in the bushman handle than in a cheap-o rambo "survival" knife but I wouldn't store my emergency items in my knife.
I reviewed the Bushman and I certainly did not like the bowie edition. It was just too large to accomplish anything but whacking. It was too thin to baton effectively and couldn't pry. It did, however, a better job at cutting off a frozen tinder fungus from a birch than my SRK, lol. I hear there's a non-bowie edition and I think that would be a better buy.
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On their site there is the non-bowie one for sale, http://www.coldsteel.com/fixed-blades-bushman.html
Its high carbon steel, Looks very good![]()
Does anyone have a Christy knife in their survival kit?
http://christycompany.net/ChristyBro....20.07-web.pdf
Or the Stanley folder?
http://www.acehardware.com/product/i...Id=24752912533
Last edited by Rick; 03-16-2008 at 08:45 PM.
Tracks Across the High Plains...Death on the Bombay Line...A Touch of Death and Mayhem...Dead Rock...The Griswald Mine Boys...All On Amazon Books.
Never used a stanley blade in the bush, got a few at home tho
i agree - this was my first hunting knife 11 years ago and i still use it frequently. great knife - holds a great edge and does everything ive ever asked of it.
i curently have the cold steel srk that seemed to take a few weeks of consistant stone work to get a good razor edge that i can apreciate. but once done it has worked well. and the cydex sheath has worked great to add 550 paracord wrap around it. i also had an old multi tool sheath laying around that zip tied on to and fit great to the outside - thus storing a few comon use stand bys such as small bick lighter, small magnesium/steel fire starter, light, and smaller folding knife.
as a few have said on this thread my main survival knife has to be my kershaw scallion. not because it is the best by anymeans but because it is always with me from the time i put my pants on in the morning until they come off at night.
I've been looking into the 3 7/8" and 4" Frosts Mora knives, laminated steel, over the past week. Mors Kochanski swears by them so I figure I'd spend the $16 and try one out. Yes you heard me right, $17 for a knife that the bush craft legend swears by. There's a video of him somewhere pounding the knife into a tree, up the to hilt, and prying it back and forth across the trunk, eventually cutting a 10-12" tree right in half! Likewise he's always seen doing bush craft with his Mora be it shelter construction, skinning, crafting (bows, spears, baskets), etc. Might be something to look into if you're not ready to spend $100 on a knife yet![]()
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Several people on the forum have them. Some have posted their pictures.
The Mora's are being a little tricky in my research, however, so I hope some members can enlighten me with their experience. The difference between the laminated steel and the carbon steel, from what I have gathered, is the former is harder (60), more flexible, but more brittle on abrasive materials. The latter is somewhat softer (57-58), holds an edge better, but does not bend (could be an issue with such a thin knife). So I'm a little lost between the two choices. I think I'll settle on the S-1, seems like the traditional, tried-and-true, knife but I don't know if I want laminated or carbon.
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Thanks. I found out I was looking at some off-brand site selling the S1 in carbon or laminated versions. After checking the official site, I see they only come in laminated, so I'm going that route.![]()
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if your willing to part with around $300 cold steel has come out with a finn blade with the san mi III stainless steel.
if your only willing to pay $10-$20 cold steel also has an in expensinve version with stainless steel and zytel handle. check on ebay under cold steel, i think its either under finn bear sisu and one i just looked up was 10.99 buy it now with 5.95 shipping.
so far i havn't seen anything bad come out of cold steel. i havn't owned anything from frost but i also havn't heard much good about them either.
Last edited by awfoxden; 03-26-2008 at 11:42 PM. Reason: found more acurate information
I have a couple of CS products and I haven't been too happy with them. A machete I got from them warped out of place while I was using so that it can't be straightened. The metal on the riflemans hawk I got seems too soft, and the hammer poll on my friend's riflemans hawk broke off while he was chopping (not hammering). There has been a comparitiive review of a Mora and a CS Finn Bear. The Mora out performed the Finn Bear hands down. http://http://www.bladeforums.com/fo...mora+finn+bear
Daniel
What's so crazy about standing toe-to-toe saying I am?
~Rocky Balboa
$300 is ridiculous to pay for a knife, unless it's a lightsabre...
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even then, you'd better look for sales.
i've gotten every fine knife i've needed for $10-20. though admittedly i've paid more form many i didn't.
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law.
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To see what's going on in my knife shop check out CanidArmory on Youtube or on Facebook.
You say you're looking for a survival knife? I think that this may be a flaw. I think you should be looking for survival "knives," meaning plural. Yes, one can survive with a single knife, but wouldn't it be much easier to have a couple? A lot of people use a trio of blades when out and about in the woods. A chopper for cutting down trees for shelter/fire, a smaller fixed blade for general cutting, and yet a smaller knife (fixed or folding) for fine delicate tasks. I would like to carry a HI khukuri or a tomahawk for my chopper, a mora for general knife usage and some delicate work, and a multi-tool for whatever (blade for food prep, scissors for skinning game, saw for knocks or cutting small limbs). With one survival knife, if it fails, you have no blade. When it comes to survival, it's always good to have a back-up.
Daniel
What's so crazy about standing toe-to-toe saying I am?
~Rocky Balboa
I'm not insulting your philosophy, but I giggle a little inside when I see people carrying multiple knives on the trail. I agree it's better to carry a chopper if you intend to chop, but then why a kukri instead of a small felling axe? Kukri's are meant to be your general purpose knife with a chopping function. If you are carrying a mora and multitool as well, carry an axe instead.
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I mention a Khukuri just because I recently got one and love it.But some people feel that they out chop hatchet and the like, I haven't gotten mine to the edge I feel sufficient with so I don't know for myself yet. Yes, khukuris are meant to be a general purpose knife, but with them being so big, it's much easier just to carry a small, lighter knife for many of the tasks. On the trail, such as day hikes, I really don't see the need for choppers, so no, I would even think about carrying anything that big (kuhk/t-hawk/ax) with me. But I'm thinking about "surviving" in the wilderness. Something that may take a couple of days or more. Then I'd want something like that trio, whether it's a khuk or a felling ax as my chopper. Hope to have cleared any confusion.
Daniel
What's so crazy about standing toe-to-toe saying I am?
~Rocky Balboa
Here are a few of my Favorites
Ontario TAK (4" blade)
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Here are some of my favorites that I choose from when I go out
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It takes 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger squeeze !
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