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Knife Test: Tom Ploppert Slip Joint

I was waiting for Tom Ploppert’s custom slip joint like a kid on Christmas morning. To my surprise, there were two knives in the package when it arrived. Tom had sent me a new knife for evaluation and another that had been used hard for a few years. Both still walk and talk like they are supposed to, but the older knife has a smoother action. Yes, the handle is beat up a little and the blade has been resharpened a few times, but I could tell it is a high-quality knife. This is a good sign of excellent workmanship—I have had slip joints get sloppy after a few uses. Tom used premium stag pinned on to make the knife scream, “Use me!”

EDGE TESTS

I started off with a sheet of copy paper. I held the slip joint between my thumb and index finger and let the weight of the folder do the cutting. I just kept turning the paper around to a fresh side and sliced along its entire length until I had cut all four sides. The knife has a very good feel to it and fits my hand very well.

    Next up: cardboard boxes. After 30 minutes of cutting I had slivers of cardboard all over the garage floor.

    I had to change out my Kydex® foam for some new stuff as I had run a large batch of sheaths and the old foam was getting too compressed. After gluing on the newly cut foam, I sliced up the older pieces by simply resting the blade edge on the foam and making a pulling cut. The slip joint sliced as fast as I could maneuver my fingers out of the way.

WOOD/ROPE/LEATHER CUTS

I had some pine 1x1s cut—they make perfect whittling sticks. Tom’s “slippy” is excellent at control and the big stag handle is very comfortable. It did not take long to produce a pile of curly-cues.

    Half-inch sisal rope was next on the agenda. The knife still felt sharp but I gave it a few strops on my leather pad for good luck. It crunched through the rope like a champ until I hit 60 cuts. My index finger rode up on the blade and I found the spine to be very sharp, and the inside of the liners also were sharp. A few strokes with a fine emery board dulled the sharpness and I settled back into cutting. I noticed the edge starting to slide at 120 cuts. Not bad at all and no more hot spots. I grabbed some leather and skived around the edges. The slip joint worked great and would still shave hair.

TIP TEST

I used the tip of the blade to cut and pry the dried skin from an old deer rack that needed cleaning. I was careful of the fine tip as I did not want to pop it off if it got stuck in the rack.

    I gave the tip another workout, stabbing it into a 2×4 and twisting the tip out. The tip handled a dozen stabs and twists without breaking or any loosening of the folder’s action. As long as I had the 2×4 handy, I gave it a few chops. The blade bit deeper than I thought it would and the knife was comfortable while doing it.

IF IT WERE MY KNIFE …

… I would soften every place that is sharp except the edge of the blade. I use knives hard and sharp edges where they should not be might result in a hot spot. Just a few minutes with fine sandpaper and it’s all good.

FINAL GRADE

Tom’s slip joint performed excellently. His fit and finish are very clean. This is one very well made, good-looking work knife. Great job!—By MSG Kim Breed, BLADE® field editor

For more information contact Tom Ploppert, Dept. BLADEMAG, 1407 2nd Ave. S.W., Cullman, AL 35055 256-962-4251 tomploppert3bellsouth.net.

PLOPPERT SLIPPY SPECS

Knife: One-blade slip joint

Maker: Tom Ploppert

Blade Steel: CPM-154 stainless

Blade Length: 3”

Handle: Sambar stag

Pins: Stainless steel

Liners: 416 stainless

Backspring: CPM-154

Closed Length: 4 1/16”

Maker’s List Price: $750

For info on how to subscribe to BLADE®, click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?lid=blss090712

 

KA-BAR Launches Military Appreciation Program

KA-BAR Knives created a Military Appreciation Program to give thanks to the heroes of the U.S. Armed Forces, and will give one KA-BAR Fighting/Utility knife to an active-duty service member each month. To be considered for the drawing, military personnel should send an email to [email protected] from a .mil email address. The email should include a name, shipping address and a brief summary of how the knife will be used. Shipping addresses must be stateside.

Winners will be selected at random the last Friday of each month. The first drawing will be held September 28th. Good luck!

Hottest Makers’ Hottest Knives

The latest installment of the hottest makers’ hottest knives employs the expertise of leading purveyors who buy custom knives and sell them, and each has been doing it for quite some time. They know what’s hot and what sells. If they didn’t, they would not be in business for so long—and BLADE® would not be asking them what they think are the hottest makers’ hottest knives. In alphabetical order, the purveyors are Larry Brahms of Bladeart.com; Daniel O’Malley of BladeGallery.com; Les Robertson of Robertson’s Custom Cutlery; Paul Shindler of Knife Legends; Dave Stark of Steel Addiction Knives; and Duane Weikum of EDC Knives.

    As with any dynamic category of well-made tools, the custom knife industry continues to evolve—and it must to keep pace with the demands of today’s sophisticated knife buyers. For instance, Stark indicated he deals with two categories that a number of leading makers are gravitating toward: tactical and dress tactical folders. “It’s a new slot for these guys Everybody’s doing both,” Stark said. “The dress tacticals come in Mokuti [a combination of mokume and titanium], mammoth ivory and damascus. Chad Nichols is the man in damascus now. He makes Mokuti and damascus in unique patterns, especially the Mokuti.”

    Robertson seems to agree, though he calls them “hybrid folders” instead of  “dress tacticals.”

    “Tactical folders and hybrid folders are the hottest knives on the market,” Robertson opined. “Hybrid folders start out with a tactical design and then, in lieu of standard blade steels, titanium bolsters and synthetic materials, upgrade the base design with damascus for blades and bolsters, and other materials such as Mokuti and supercollider material for bolsters and frames. Lastly, the handle material is upgraded to high-end natural materials.”

    O’Malley outlined several categories that are extremely hot: production/custom crossover makers (makers that are known both for their production knives and custom knives); art knives, that is, “carved artwork with an edge”; handmade hunting knives; gent’s knives with a tactical edge; and handmade kitchen knives. For Weikum, custom balisongs are gaining traction.

    “The balisong market is heating up in 2012. We have makers who have been making balisongs for years and now produce the best balisongs there are, including Charles Marlowe, Terry Guinn and Chris Olofson of 29 Knives,” he noted. “You also have young makers coming into the market and setting it on fire such as Jeremy Marsh, G.T. Cecchini, Todd Begg, Brad Southard and Sam Eddleman.”

     Robertson indicated specific knives in damascus also are in demand. “Another hot market sector is damascus hunters and damascus bowies—not just any damascus hunters or bowies, but those from the established makers featuring top-quality, natural handle materials,” he observed.

    Shindler said Italian and French makers continue to be red hot on the art-knife side of the ledger, including Charles Bennica, Jean-Pierre Sucheras, Antonio and Salvatore Fogarizzu, Salvatore Puddu, Emmanuel Esposito and Fabrizio Silvestrelli. “This goes along with the usual Art Knife Invitational suspects—Michael Walker, Jurgen Steinau and Wolfgang Loerchner,” he noted.

    “The current economic climate seems to have driven many collectors out of the $1,500-to-$5,000 price range, which is impacting just about nearly every high-quality knifemaker you can think of. The exceptions are the French and Italian makers who fall into this price segment,” Shindler said. “Long-time elite makers in this price range who are coming to shows with new ideas and patterns appear to be fairing much better than top-notch makers who bring the same patterns and models to shows they’ve been selling for the last 10 years. This will most likely change when there is once again an influx of new collectors who don’t already own those patterns—most likely after the economy is on the mend and everyday folks and collectors are back to work.

    “From what I hear, there is no shortage of collectors for knives in the under-$700 price category, and the same may be said of knives in the $7,000-$10,000 category. Collectors are actively buying knives in that price range if you have exactly the knife they are looking for at a very competitive price. I see no change in the over-$15,000-per-knife market, where the same collectors continue to actively buy the best and most-sought-after models of the most elite makers—in the rare instances when knives by those makers become available.

    “Hardly a day seems to pass without the appearance of new slip-joint and Loveless-tribute knifemakers into a market which is currently not growing overall,” Shindler continued. “As a result, more and more makers in these two categories are carving up the business into smaller and smaller pieces, making it tougher for even the best-known and most successful slip-joint and Loveless-tribute makers to do the business of even two or three years ago.”—By Steve Shackleford

 

 Hottest Makers’ Hottest Knives

Maker                                        Knife List                                        Price*

Jens Anso                                  Model 67                                        $675

Todd Begg                                  Bodega                                          $900+

Tashi Bharucha                          Deep Cover                                   $675

David Broadwell                         Carved art fighter                          $2,000+

Michael Burch                             Platypus                                       $1,000

Jim Burke                                    Crusader                                      $850

Lucas Burnley                             Kawaiken flipper                            $600

G.T. Cecchini                               Anything he makes                       $900+

Brian Fellhoelter                          FLG                                              $500

Jerry Fisk                                    Sendero                                        $2,000+

Les George                                 Rockeye                                       $475

DireWare                                     Solo                                             $500

Allen Elishewitz                           Gordian Knot                                $950

Rick Hinderer                              XM18                                           $400+

Flavio Ikoma                                Harrier                                         $2,000+

Korth                                            Carved Sentry                             $2,400+

Schuyler Lovestrand                    Sub-hilt fighter                             $1,000+

R.J. Martin                                   The Devastator                            $650+

Tom Mayo                                    Persian flipper                             $800

Charles Marlowe                          S1                                               $1,600+

Jeremy Marsh                               Vanquish                                    $1,200+

Scott McGhee                              Mamba                                        $700+

Gerry McGinnis                            Peligro                                         $675

Shawn McIntyre                           Damascus hunter                         $850

Jonathan McNees                        MCK1                                           $170

Fred Ott                                        Stag hamon hunter                       $585

Todd Rexford                                Epicenter                                     $1,000+

Phil Rose                                      Survival/military fixed blade          $475

Sniper Bladeworks                        DH                                                $575

Tim Steingass                               AK Hunter                                      $310

Mick Strider                                  Anything he makes                         $900+

Andre Van Heerden                      M27                                               $1,025

Nick Wheeler                                Fighter                                            $800+

Daniel Winkler                               WK II Belt Knife                             $350

Will Zermeno                                 LR2 Azrael                                    $325

*Prices will vary depending on whether knives are primary or secondary market, materials, configurations, etc., and are subject to change at a moment’s notice.

 

HERE’S THE POOP ON THE KNIFE BY STEEL ADDICTION CUSTOM KNIVES PICTURED AT TOP:

Maker: Lee Williams

Knife: Horizon

Pattern: Dress tactical

Action : Flipper

Blade steel: CPM-154 stainless

Blade length: 3.75”

Handle: Mokuti by Chad Nichols

Special Feature: Bee Line kick stop ensures the flipper tab “disappears” when the knife is open

Insider’s Info: “Lee Williams’ Mokuti piece, the Horizon flipper with the Bee Line kick stop, is about as hot as they come.”—Dave Stark, Steel Addiction Custom Knives

Maker’s List Price: $1,600

 

For info on how to subscribe to BLADE, click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?lid=blss090512

Hunter’s Edge: Kutmaster Cutting Combo

Tackle any number of hunting knife chores with the Kutmaster Team Realtree Field Dress/Caping Combo .

    Outfitted in Team Realtree saw-cut camo handles and 420 stainless blade steel, the set includes a gut-hook skinner and caping knife.

    The full-tang-construction fixed blades are designed for work on both big and small game.

    Nylon belt sheaths complete the cool cutting combo.

    ShopBlade’s price: $29.99.

For more info click on http://www.shopblade.com/kutmaster-team-realtree-field-dress-caping-combo-knives-y7731/?lid=blss090412

Video: Ken Onion Signs CRKT Foresights for BLADE

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A BLADE exclusive! Ken Onion engraves his signature on 100 of the CRKT Foresights he designed. These signed knives are only available at ShopBlade.com.

Hurry, they’re going fast! Click here to get your autographed Ken Onion Foresight before they’re gone.

Bladesports World Championship Blade Show Atlanta, GA. 6/9/2012

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A video of the cutting competition that took place during the Bladesports World Championship during the 2012 Blade Show at the Cobb Galleria in Atlanta, Georgia. 6/9/2012


BLADE Recommends

Before you can take part in a cutting competition, you need a firm grasp on how to make knives. The Complete Bladesmith by Jim Hrisoulas is the perfect book for just that.

Click here to check out this essential knifemaking book.

Read the Paul Ryan Hunter Interview

 

Paul Ryan Hunter, Outdoorsman, Vice Presidential Hopeful

BLADE‘s sister magazine, Deer & Deer Hunting, is receiving a ton of big league attention for its interview about Paul Ryan hunting deer. It’s offering the full Paul Ryan hunter Q&A as a download from this page on Deer & Deer Hunting.

That’s Paul Ryan deer hunting with a bow in his home state, Wisconsin, in the photo at left. It shouldn’t come as any surprise, since the area has a long tradition of hunting deer and other game species. Here’s a snippet from Paul Ryan deer hunter himself:

 

“I’m just pretty typical for a Wisconsin guy. I love hunting and fishing,” Ryan said. “Bowhunting is my passion. Studying the strategy, preparing food plots, the strategy of where a dominant buck is living or will be moving and then being in position to get a shot, that’s really exciting. Half of it is getting ready for the shot.”
A good deal of the Paul Ryan hunting interview covers everything before the shot. BLADE would’ve liked to sneak in a few questions about the knives he uses, but the time allotted for the Paul Ryan hunter interview was brief. We suppose he had just a littlebit on his plate.

 

Still, BLADE celebrates Deer & Deer Hunting‘s Paul Ryan deer hunting interview. It shows how mainstream hunting is with a lot of people. It must only follow that knives play a role with these folks, too.

 

Click here to read the Paul Ryan deer hunter interview with Deer & Deer Hunting.

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