Kinsayder wrote:I have been thinking about a fixed blade lately though, although I wouldn't take it up with me because of the weight.
The Mora Companion I posted above is considerably lighter than your Skeletool, and that's including the sheath
Moondog55 wrote:Mora
Kinsayder wrote:The Mora Companion I posted above is considerably lighter than your Skeletool, and that's including the sheath
It's not a competition, Strider.![]()
The Mora does look quite nice though. Where do you find them?
Strider wrote:Kinsayder wrote:The Mora Companion I posted above is considerably lighter than your Skeletool, and that's including the sheath
It's not a competition, Strider.![]()
The Mora does look quite nice though. Where do you find them?
Mine were work issue but heaps of them on Ebay. Cheap, strong and easy to sharpen. These knives have a cult following worldwide.
Light My Fire also offer a Mora with a Swedish firesteel built into the handle.
David M wrote:Is it necessary to have a "survival" knife with a thick spine that is super strong and can be used (e.g.) with an improvised hammer to split or cut wood or perform other heavy duty tasks? I don't have a problem with that except for the weight penalty. The Opinel only has a thin approx. 2mm spine so I expect is good for general cutting but not abuse of this nature like a survival knife (but it doesn't claim to be one).
bushwalker zane wrote:Mark - Thank you for the information. By the sounds of it, carbon steel would be the best way to go. As for size I guess I'll just have to see what fits my hand the best. Is there much of a price difference between carbon steel and stainless?
Beacon Hill Ben wrote:Sorry, but I disagree. I am a knife nut... sigh... and the old adage that carbon is better is just not true any more.
Carbon is easy to sharpen - so is good Stainless, in either case you need to learn how to do this and spend some money on buying the right sharpening kit . Entire forums are filled with this...
Carbon holds a good edge - so does good stainless, in fact better, if you neglegt a carbon knive it will rust!
Carbon rusts - Stainless does not (or nowhere near as much, is the correct answer).
Carbon rusts - immediately, when cutting acid things like fruit, wood, any food.
Carbon knives make your food taste like iron! Yuk!
You live in Australia. Been to the beach lately? Or on the sea? Stainless rules in Australia!
Bottom line, carbon is a cheap material and easy to process in manufacturing, which is why several manufacturers will tell you that Carbon is Good. In fact, in 2012, Stainless is better.
Good stainless: Look at Mora, Bark River, Fallkniven, SpiderCo, they all use good stainless for great knives.
David M wrote:...Is it necessary to have a "survival" knife with a thick spine that is super strong and can be used (e.g.) with an improvised hammer to split or cut wood or perform other heavy duty tasks?...
tsangpo wrote:If it is only needed for food you can get these: http://www.scanpan.dk/Produkter/Spectru ... nife_Green or ripoffs like it for a couple of bucks. Works well with the sheath and is very light.
Beacon Hill Ben wrote:Good stainless: Look at Mora, Bark River, Fallkniven, SpiderCo, they all use good stainless for great knives.
Strider wrote:Beacon Hill Ben wrote:Good stainless: Look at Mora, Bark River, Fallkniven, SpiderCo, they all use good stainless for great knives.
Also look at Sanrenmu (SRM). They manufacture knives for Spyderco, Benchmade, etc. Very good quality and can be had for under $10 posted. The 8Cr13MOV steel holds a wicked edge and is a dream to sharpen.
Beacon Hill Ben wrote:Strider wrote:Beacon Hill Ben wrote:Good stainless: Look at Mora, Bark River, Fallkniven, SpiderCo, they all use good stainless for great knives.
Also look at Sanrenmu (SRM). They manufacture knives for Spyderco, Benchmade, etc. Very good quality and can be had for under $10 posted. The 8Cr13MOV steel holds a wicked edge and is a dream to sharpen.
Interesting, yet darn! Now I have to buy more knives again...
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