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What is a “Tactical Razor?”

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custom razors
Mardi Meshejian forged the 4-inch blade of his Tactical Razor in a Gordian’s Knot damascus of 1095 and 15N20 carbon steels. The choil has a deep cutout not only as a design element but also to lock onto the detent when the knife is closed. The folder has no clip but Mardi said he can include one on a custom order. (Chuck Ward knife image)

ABS journeyman smith Mardi Meshejian has always been known for pushing the envelope, and he has done it again with his Tactical Razor.

Drawing on the worlds of both fantasy and utility, Mardi arrived at his razor-style linerlock. “I wanted to do it a little bit on the crazy side, so I went with a tactical razor and amped it up some,” he explained.

Mardi said he’s been making quite a few razors of late—not your standard shaving model but a little beefier for EDC use. “I make them thicker for everyday cutting chores,” though at a list price of $1,600, this one is on the showpiece side of the equation.

He fashioned the damascus for the blade in a “Gordian’s Knot” pattern. He forged four bars of twist—two to the left and two to the right—put in a square forge weld and twisted it again. That’s why there are so many layers of twist in it. The handle is a twist pattern of titanium damascus.

Mardi employed a very steep hollow blade grind for both looks and utility. As he noted, “The grind gives a keen edge and digs deep into the damascus and reveals the twist pattern.”

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“All the Skin Was Ground Off” – 5 Knife Shop Horror Stories

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injuries from making knives

The rich tradition of knifemaking is full of rewards, but it demands respect. The ways a knife shop can inflict bodily harm are endless. That’s why BLADE asked knifemakers to share some of the worst accidents in their shops. Hopefully, others can learn how to avoid making the same mistakes.

Stay safe!


“Like a Missile Straight at My Right Shin”

Lesson: Save sharpening for the last steps of making a knife.

There’s a reason sharpening should ALWAYS be the last thing you do on any knife before it leaves the shop.

A few years back I was working on a large Bowie. The customer requested a sharp, full convex edge on the clip/swedge area. Against my better judgement, I got in a hurry and sharpened this swedge as soon as the knife was back from heat treat…with a lot of work left to perform with this razor sharp edge on the clip.

Somehow I managed to let the tip of the knife bite into a cork belt which caught it and ripped it out of my hands and sent it like a missile straight at my right shin. Since that top edge was sharp it cut through my boot and buried itself about 3/4-inches into my leg. It filled my boot with blood and ended all work for a couple days.

If I hadn’t been wearing boots or if both edges had been sharpened, I’m sure it would’ve exited the backside of my ankle and possibly crippled me, or worse. It was a lesson that reinforced a very basic rule of our craft and I don’t think I’ll ever forget it.

Martin Olexey
Martin Olexey Blades


“The Knife Went Right Through My Legs”

Lesson: Stand to the side of the buffer.

The buffer is the silent sleepy monster that can lull you into a wheelchair for life or just take it from you in the blink of an eye.

When I started making knives about six years ago, I had this cheap Ryobi buffer that I spent like $40 on. Thank God I did, because if it would’ve been stronger, I’d probably not be here right now. That thing ripped a fully sharpened drop-point hunter right out of my hands and spun it around to to the ground with the tip hitting first.

I was sitting down in front of the buffer, and the knife went right through my legs. Stupid hurts, and that was as stupid as it gets.

I still probably I don’t realize how close I was to death. It scared the s*** out of me, enough so as to never use the buffer facing in front of me ever again. I stick to the side now, and am always alert with the door locked so no one can come in to distract me.

I love making knives and every thing about it, except for the buffing and polishing.

Roger Barnes
BC Cutlery Co.


“All the Skin and Part of the Finger Nail was Ground Off”

Lesson: Wear gloves while using a grinder.

While rough grinding a blade on my 2×72 belt grinder, I was pressing pretty hard against a 36-grit belt. At the time, I thought to myself, I need to stop and grab a pair of leather gloves.”

Sure enough, the blade slips, and I drove my finger in to the belt. It was only a split second, and I jerked back instantly. It was still enough time for 36-grit traveling at 1,750 rpm to do the job. All the skin and part of the finger nail was ground off.

I always say I put a little blood into every knife, usually when hand finishing, but dang this one was to excess. Lesson learned. I now keep a dedicated pair of gloves by the grinder when performing heavy roughing.

Gene Border
Edge of the Border Knives


“A Perfect, Knife-Shaped Burn on My Ankle”

Lesson: Use tongs that grip work securely.

I was forging and tried to use a pair of tongs that didn’t grip the work well enough. This knocked the piece I was holding loose. The blade dropped right in the gap between my work boot and my ankle.

By the time I could get it knocked out of my boot and my foot in the water bucket, I had a perfect, knife-shaped burn on my ankle.

Lessons learned. Don’t forge in shorts. Either use tongs that hold well, forge from barstock, or weld short pieces of blade steel to a rebar handle.

Dave Armour
Armour Cutlery


“I had Caught My Butt Cheeks on Fire”

Lesson: Don’t become complacent around forges.

Last winter, I got up before daylight with a plan to forge a couple skinners. It was extremely cold out, and I have no heat in my shop. So I lit the forge, which is pretty cold-natured due to its size. It has a small doorway in the rear that I keep blocked off with a fire brick.

Well, the fire brick fell off onto the ground at some point, and the forge was shooting flames out the rear. I fumbled around sleepily and walked behind the forge to get my gloves and glasses put on. Unbeknown to me, the flames were reaching the back of my coveralls. I started smelling something burning and immediately felt the heat.

I had caught my butt cheeks on fire.

So I sprinted through the door like a battering ram and did a flying back smacker into a couple inches of snow we had gotten through the night. I hadn’t felt pain back there like that since I was a kid when I sprayed my dad with a water hose while he was finishing concrete.

The coveralls were toast. There was a fist-sized hole in them that left me with two, half dollar-sized blisters and a hairless rear end like the bear on “The Great Outdoors.”

Complacency is the number one cause of accidents on job sites. Working around a 2,000-degree forge is no different.

Davey Pratt
Bonds Creek Knives

Learn First-Aid For Knifemakers From A Doctor

 

While you’re at BLADE Show 2019 this June in Atlanta, be sure to take the First-Aid For Knifemakers class, hosted by Dr. Martin Payne. Register here.

 

6 New Factory Folders for 2018

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When the calendar flips over to a new year, the steel is sure to follow. Here are six factory folders debuting this year.

Spyderco Hanan

Brad Southard designed this 2.9-ounce folder named after the Hebrew word for “gracious gift.”

Here’s a spec illustration from Spyderco:

Spyderco Parata

spyderco parata knife

Automotive engineer Paul Alexander designed this folder with a big-bellied, VG-10 blade. 

The specs:

CRKT Raikiri

“When you want a sword, but need an EDC,” is how CRKT describes this latest addition to sport Field Strip tech. 

  • Blade Length: 3.759″ (95.48 mm)
  • Blade Length: 3.759″ (95.48 mm)
  • Blade Edge: Plain Edge
  • Blade Steel: 1.4116 SS
  • Blade Finish: Satin Finish
  • Blade Thickness: 0.134″ (3.4 mm)
  • Closed Length: 5.112″ (129.84 mm)
  • Weight: 5.0 oz
  • Handle: ADC12 Aluminium; Casting
  • Style: Folding Knife w/Locking Liner
  • Overall Length: 8.938″ (227.03 mm)

CRKT Offbeat

crkt offbeat

Originally designed in the 1970s by Pat and Wes Crawford, this creation makes its factory debut in 2018. True to its name, it sports the Crawford Lockback.

  • Blade Length: 3.522″ (89.46 mm)
  • Blade Edge: Plain Edge
  • Blade Steel: 8Cr13MoV
  • Blade Finish: Satin Finish
  • Blade Thickness: 0.109″ (2.77 mm)
  • Closed Length: 4.483″ (113.87 mm)
  • Weight: 2.9 oz
  • Handle: 2Cr13; Brush Finish
  • Style: Folding Knife w/Lockback
  • Overall Length: 8.0” (203.2 mm)

Benchmade Vector

The blue-class Vector offers something for flipper fans, but with the twist of Benchmade’s AXIS® Assist tech.

  • Designer: Benchmade
  • Mechanism: AXIS® Assist flipper
  • Action: Assisted-opening
  • Blade Length: 3.60″ (9.14cm)
  • Blade Thickness: 0.100″ (2.540mm)
  • Open Length: 8.42″ (21.39cm)
  • Closed Length: 4.82″ (12.24cm)
  • Blade Steel: CPM-S30V (58-60 HRC)
  • Handle Thickness: 0.60″ (15.240mm)
  • Weight: 4.11oz. (116.52g)
  • Blade Edge: Plain
  • Blade Finish/Color: Satin
  • Blade Style/Shape: Spear-point
  • Clip Type: Standard
  • Clip Position: Tip-Up
  • Glass Breaker: No
  • Handle Material: Black Contoured G10
  • Lanyard Hole: Yes
  • MOLLE Compatible: No
  • Sheath Type: No

Benchmade Foray

On the other end of the Benchmade spectrum, the gold-class Foray uses Damasteel and a mother of pearl inlay for an art knife feel with the heart of an EDC.

  • Designer: Benchmade
  • Mechanism: AXIS®
  • Action: Manual-opening
  • Blade Steel: Loki™ pattern Damasteel® (58-60 HRC)
  • Blade Length: 3.22″ (8.18cm)
  • Blade Thickness: 0.137″ (3.480mm)
  • Overall Length: 7.34″ (18.64cm)
  • Handle Thickness: 0.56″ (14.22mm)
  • Weight: 3.46oz. (98.09g)
  • Blade Edge: Plain
  • Blade Finish/Color: Damasteel
  • Blade Style/Shape: Drop-point
  • Clip Type: Deep-Carry
  • Clip Position: Tip-Up
  • Glass Breaker: No
  • Handle Material: Marbled carbon fiber
  • Lanyard Hole: No
  • MOLLE Compatible: No
  • Sheath Type: No

 

Knife News Wire 1/8/18 – Artificial Intelligence Comes to Knife Sharpeners

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Knife sharpening robot machine
Will computers put knife sharpening services out of business?

Coming to a Knife Sharpener Near You: Artificial Intelligence

You’ve got to hand it to the robots when it comes to knife sharpening. Literally. Hand over your knife to an artificial intelligence for sharpening, human.

That’s what the future may hold, if the “Knife Robot” offers any hint. This video posted on Twitter lays it all out.

The Knife Robot raised $121,405 in crowdfunding through Indiegogo in April 2017. It used this video to pitch that campaign:

Here’s a bit about how the device actually works:

It doesn’t look like the company is ready for business yet, if at all. Its website URL, kniferobot.com, directs back to the Indiegogo page, and its social media handles haven’t been updated since early 2017.

Even if that means this device is dead in the water, don’t count out similar products. AI is popping up all over the place, and false starts are to be expected.

The First New Knifemaking Innovation in 200 Years?

Speaking of crowdfunding, a new knife company, Habitat Housewares, catching eyes on Kickstarter is promising a knifemaking innovation so revolutionary, it will change the world of knives forever. It’s the “first knife-making innovation in over 200 years,” as Tech.ly quoted the makers here

Adam Ackerman, the name behind the operation, raised $319,000 to prime the pump for the latest incarnations of this ground-breaking knife.

So what is it? Here the rundown from the Kickstarter page:

  • Blade edge is extra-sharp and stays sharp 5 times longer than other knives
  • Edge is made with patented alloy, developed by Caltech and tested by NASA
  • Alloy is twice as strong as titanium
  • Our patent-pending process bonds the alloy to a stainless steel knife body
  • Each knife priced under $100, yet better than most professional knives costing hundreds of dollars

Let’s be clear about one thing: this is not the first new innovation in the last 200 years of knifemaking. That is objectively false, and that the line gets repeated throughout the marketing for these knives does not represent the pinnacle of insincerity, not transparency.

Yes, marketers make hyperbole a part of the business, because that’s just business, but to present such a statement as fact disrespects the scores of innovations knifemakers and knife companies contributed in the past few decades alone. Or were the Buck 110, the pocket clip and the assisted opener really that forgettable?

Knife Retailer Clarifies Knife Laws by State

Hobanco, a knife retailer, recently launched a new initiative to put knife laws across the country into plain English on its blog.

The company originally posted a knife laws page using AKTI links, but this appears to be an effort to help its customers even better understand the nuances. So far, the company put together summaries for Arizona, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Georgia, Illinois, Oregon, Colorado, Alabama, Texas, Ohio, California, Florida and Michigan.

It’s always encouraging when companies take the time to educate their customers about knives. Many companies and small makers offer information on steel types, designs, history, proper care and, of course, laws. And BLADE gives them a big thumbs up when they do.

Read Hobanco’s blog here.

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    Knife News Wire 1/5/18 – One-Third of Pocketknife Owners are Women

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    31% of Outdoors and Pocketknife Owners are Women

    Kershaw Knives posted a fun quiz on its Twitter profile this week, focused on demographics.

    If you read the headline, you already know the answer. Here it is anyway:

    Granted, that data is a decade old, but it offers some good insights into market conditions. If you’re curious about more knife demographics, check out Knife Rights here.

     

    Knife Shows in January and February

    2018 BLADE Show
    Don’t forget about BLADE Show in Atlanta in early June! It’ll be bigger and better than ever. Click for info.

    JAN. 5-6 HELSINKI, FINLAND
    The 9th International Knife Show, Crowne Plaza Helsinki. For more visit helsinkiknifeshow.com

    JAN. 19-21 LAS VEGAS, NV
    Las Vegas Invitational Knifemakers Show in conjunction with the Antique Arms Show, Westgate Resort & Casino
    Contact the show at POB 1074, Dept. BKG18, Murrieta, CA 92564 951-970-9669 [email protected] antiquearmsshow.com

    JAN. 27 LAS VEGAS, NV
    Tactical Knife Invitational Caesars Palace
    Call 417-866-6688 or visit fiftyfiftyproductions.net (advanced registration only)

    JAN. 27-28 ST. LOUIS, MO
    Gateway Area Knife Club Cutlery Fair
    Carpenters’ Hall Contact Steve 314-795-4262 [email protected]

    FEB. 2-4 LAKELAND, FL
    The 40th Annual Gator Cutlery Club Knife Show
    Lakeland Center.
    Call Dan Piergallini 813-754-3908 or 813-967-1471

    FEB. 10 WYOMING, MI
    West Michigan Edge Show
    The K of C Hall
    Call Mike 616-322-5846

    FEB. 17 HONOLULU, HI
    Hawaii Custom Knife & Tactical Show
    Pomaikai Ballrooms at Dole Cannery
    Contact JSM Cutlery LLC, Dept. BKG18, POB 1290, Aiea, HI 96701 872-356-2953 [email protected]

    FEB. 17 LITTLE ROCK, AR
    The Arkansas Knife Show
    Statehouse Convention Center Call 870-279-7329 arknife.com

    Make a Survival Knife with What’s in Your Garage

    So says this article at SOFREP. The tutorial is as basic as it gets, excluding power tools or anything exotic to the typical household. Tensions with North Korea inspired the piece:

    When you mention such a apocalyptic scenario to many people, the first thing they want to regale you with is a list of their firearms, ammunition stores, and food and water supply. That stuff all matters, and while I too maintain a laundry list of those sorts of things, many tend to forget about what I consider to be among the most important survival tools a man or woman could ever have: a good quality knife.

    The full tutorial is available only to members on SOFREP, but the spoilers are littered throughout history. If you can shape something hard into something long, narrow, edged and portable, you can make a knife, just as people did since the dawn of time.

    make a survival knife
    It cuts the grass and saves your assets. (This is a family-friendly website.)

    If we’re talking about typical garage items, you might start with a lawnmower blade. Draw a pattern on the metal, then cut away the excess with a hacksaw. Sharpen the edge and form the point with a file. Buff out the spurs with sandpaper, then wrap the handle in paracord or bootlaces.

    That’s about as basic as it gets, although I’m sure SOFREP puts its own spin on it, too.

    Survival Beer Pairs Well With Survival Knife?

    Dogfish Head, a brewery in Delaware, recently unveiled its new “survival beer” called, “The End of the Wort As We Know It.” The beverage is made with fruit and grains high in nutrients, as well as 9% alcohol by volume. But the kicker is what’s outside of the bottle.

    From the article at Delaware Online:

    To top it off, the $45 750ml bottle comes wrapped in a solar blanket with a limited edition Dogfish-branded Swiss Army knife.

    Some might raise an eyebrow at the combo of knives and alcohol, but that’s beside the point. How are you supposed to survive the Apocalypse with only 750 mils of blues-chaser?

    It’s New Knife Catalog Season

    Now is when knife companies roll out their new catalogs. Head to your favorite companies’ website and download the PDF or order a print version (they’re free). BLADE will cover the latest and greatest here and in the print magazine, but you can get a jump on it now, too.

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      The Knife of “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle”

      Steve Auvenshine movie knives
      The knife Steve Auvenshine created for “Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle.” (knife images courtesy of Steve Auvenshine)

      Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, released around Christmas 2017, might’ve slipped under the radar for film-savvy knife enthusiasts. However, the movie marks yet another contribution by Kentucky knifemaker Steve Auvenshine to the prop departments of Hollywood.

      Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, portraying Dr. Smolder Bravestone, carries a fixed blade in a sheath on his right hip throughout the movie.

      Knife used in Jumanji movie
      Dwayne Johnson, second from left, wears the knife in the a sheath on his right hip throughout the new Jumanji movie. (Image via imdb.com)
      knives used in the jumanji movie
      A closer look. (Image via imdb.com)

      Auvenshine, who also made knives for the Jurassic World movies, noted how the actor’s size warped the perception of the knife on screen.

      “It’s a beast. Weighs almost two pounds. About 20 inches OAL. Dwayne Johnson, ‘The Rock,’ makes it look pretty normal!” Auvenshine wrote on his Facebook page.

      Jumanji knife
      The knife next to a quarter, for reference.

      Specs

      The measured specs are as follows:

      • Weight: 30 ounces
      • Overall length: 18 inches
      • Handle length: 6.5 inches
      • Blade length: 11.5 inches
      • Blade steel: 1075/80

      Here are some closer views from Auvenshine’s shop:

       

      Jumanji knife

      Knifemakers: Tell BLADE About Your Knife Shop Accidents

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      Accidents while making knives

      In light of the devastating fire allegedly started by an amateur knifemakerBLADE doesn’t want anyone else to learn bladesmithing trial-by-fire style, literally.

      That’s why we want to hear about your accidents in your knife shops. There’s no shame, and you can remain anonymous if you’d like. The point is prevent someone else from making the same mistake.

      The focus here is on safety. Preventative tips are welcome, too.

      Your contributions will be used in an upcoming BLADE feature. Thank you!

        Have a photo? Upload it here

         

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