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Knives Of Summer: Make Mine a Machete

Vines, shrubs, leaves, bushes, etc., overgrowing your campsite or just your yard? Check out the Gerber Gator Machete.

    It sports a 15-inch blade and a 15-inch sawback for extra-tough cutting jobs. A rubber grip is designed for control and a nylon sheath is included. Overall length: 25.7 inches. ShopBlade’s price: $19.99.

    For more information click on http://www.shopblade.com/gerber-gator-machete-w-sheath-y6980/?r+ssfb070212

Knives Of Summer: Make ‘Em The Loveless Way

It’s a long, hot summer—so why not fill the time by reading Knifemaking with Bob Loveless and learn how to make knives the way the legend himself did?

    Durwood Hollis knew Loveless and visited the Loveless shop many times. Hollis wrote the book and takes you through making knives the Loveless way in word and color pictures, including the tools, blade, handle, sheath and edge work, and much more. There are also chapters on knife care and the people who worked with Loveless over the years, as well as color pictures of some of Loveless’ greatest knives, including some of those from the John Denton collection.

    For more info on how to obtain your copy of Knifemaking with Bob Loveless, click on http://www.shopblade.com/knifemaking-with-bob-loveless/?r+ssfb062912

 

For more on the latest knives, knife legislation, knifemaking instruction, knife trends, knifemakers, what knives to buy and where and much more, subscribe to BLADE® Magazine, the World’s No. 1 Knife Publication. Click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?r+ssfb062912 for more information.

Video: Handle Pin Peening Techniques

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Master Smith Daniel Warren demonstrates handle pin peening techniques on a Woodhead Bowie knife handle. For more information on bladesmithing techniques plea…

AKTI Wins a Blade Magazine 2012 Industry Achievement Award®

The American Knife & Tool Institute (AKTI) won a Blade Magazine 2012 Industry Achievement Award® for stellar work in the area of pro-knife legislation at the recent BLADE Show (www.bladeshow.com) in Atlanta.

    Another organization receiving a Blade Magazine 2012 Industry Achievement Award was Knife Rights, also for its efforts in protecting Americans’ right to own, use and carry knives.

    Accepting the award on behalf of AKTI was AKTI Executive Director Jan Billeb (pictured above). “It was a real pleasure to accept the Industry Achievement Award from BLADE® Magazine on behalf of the AKTI Board of Regents and all members of the American Knife & Tool Institute who have diligently worked since 1998 to ensure that our liberties to make, own or use knives or edged tools have not been further restricted, and to successfully remove knife law restrictions.  We are pleased that BLADE Magazine recognizes the achievements of our organization on behalf of the knife industry and all knife owners,” Billeb said. “There is still a lot of work to be done to make reasonable and responsible changes state by state and we appreciate the support of the entire knife community.”  

    In May, the Louisiana governor signed AKTI-supported legislation that made it clear that a knife with a bias toward closure is not an illegal switchblade. Bias-toward-closure language is a concept that has stood the test of time since AKTI introduced it in California over a decade ago, an AKTI press release reported. Several states, including Texas and Kansas, have since adopted it, as well as it being incorporated into the Federal Switchblade Act. This language clarifies that assisted-opening knives are not classified as “illegal” switchblades or gravity knives. More information about the bias-toward closure-concept and AKTI’s past successes recognized by BLADE is available at www.akti.org

    AKTI is working with legislators in South Carolina to pass pre-emption language, Pennsylvania to remove all knife restrictions, Michigan to remove the switchblade prohibition and other restrictions, Alaska to incorporate the bias-toward-closure language, as well as in several other states to remove or lessen knife restrictions.

    In an interview after the ceremony AKTI President Bill Raczkowski commented, “Thanks to BLADE Magazine for honoring AKTI with an Industry Achievement Award acknowledging the proactive efforts of our organization. Our members sincerely appreciate the many ways that BLADE Magazine and the BLADE Show help us spread the word about the importance of AKTI’s efforts to keep knives in American lives.”

 

For more on the latest knives, knife legislation, knifemaking instruction, knife trends, knifemakers, what knives to buy and where and much more, subscribe to BLADE® Magazine, the World’s No. 1 Knife Publication. Click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?r+ssfb062812 for more information.

Knives Of Summer: Timberline Alaskan Bush Pilot Hatchet

Summer means camping and camping requires lots of chopping jobs for such handy pieces as the Alaskan Bush Pilot Hatchet from Timberline.

    Designed by custom knifemaker Russ Kommer, the hatchet features a 440 stainless steel blade in a satin finish and a finger-grooved haft covered with Zytel slabs. Overall length: 9 inches. Weight: 3 pounds. It comes with a bridle leather sheath and a non-slip belt loop.

    For more info on the Timberline Alaskan Bush Pilot Hatchet click on http://www.shopblade.com/timberline-bush-pilot-survival-hatchet-6013/?r+ssfb062712

 

For more on the latest knives, knife legislation, knifemaking instruction, knife trends, knifemakers, what knives to buy and where and much more, subscribe to BLADE® Magazine, the World’s No. 1 Knife Publication. Click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?r+ssfb062712 for more information.

DPx Gear: Hot Knives From A Hot New Company

Robert Pelton Young (above), adventurer, filmmaker and author of Licensed To Kill*, The World’s Most Dangerous Places, and Come Back Alive, has spent a good bit of his life in places most people would not visit with a free, round-trip, first-class ticket and an 82nd Airborne Division fire team as bodyguards. War zones, low-intensity conflict areas, failed states, third world dictatorships, pestilent swamps, parched deserts and places where guys with AKs and bad attitudes hang out are home to RYP, as he prefers to be addressed. His first knife design, the HEST—Hostile Environment Survival Tool—reflects that experience, as do his later models, all now offered through DPx Gear.

    His entry into knife design was sparked by talks with Jeff Randall of ESEE Knives—then known as R.A.T. Cutlery—when both were in Peru, where RYP was doing a story on drug labs and Jeff was running one of his survival courses. The original HEST grew from those conversations and was initially manufactured by R.A.T. (page 74, October 2009 BLADE®).

    RYP has expanded his product range and manufacturing base. Ontario Knife Co. manufactures the original HEST, made to the same specs. Lion Steel of Maniago, Italy, makes another version, the HEST II, using Uddeholm Sleipner tool steel. Lion also manufactures the HEST/F, a folder with a D2 tool steel blade designed for the same hostile environments, and two models of the HEFT—Hostile Environment Field Tool—one with a 4-inch blade, the other 6 inches, both of Uddeholm Sleipner. All versions of the HEST and HEFT have a storage compartment under the scales.

    My cohort and I used the original HEST extensively over a period of a year in the California Sierras and the Mojave Desert. It also was one of the few knives I brought with me during my six months of travel in various countries around the Mediterranean. At 7 5/8 inches overall and with a 3 1/8-inch blade of 3/16-inch 1095 carbon steel in a Rockwell hardness of 56-57 HRC, the HEST and its Kydex® sheath are small enough to disappear in a pocket, tuck inside a belt, or carry as a neck knife. It is an excellent example of what I call a “traveler’s knife”—a fixed blade small enough to have with you at all times, sturdy enough to pry open a locked door, rip through a stone wall, serve as an arresting device, and with the ability to take and hold a hair-popping edge.

    We did all those things with the HEST and used it for everyday tasks: opening boxes, whittling fire boards and preparing food, including slicing potatoes, ribs, steaks and ripe tomatoes, the latter which requires a very sharp edge to avoid squishing them. If a knife is not useful on a daily basis, sooner or later it will be left behind. The HEST is effective as a daily tool and serves as a reliable emergency implement.

    It sports a wire breaker, a tiny pry bar at the butt and a bottle opener. Where he travels, RYP said good beer has caps requiring a lifter, whereas bad beer has screw tops. However, I had reservations about the bottle-opening notch and was concerned it weakened the blade. In actual practice the blade did flex at that juncture with the weight of a 200-pound person hanging from it, but it did not break and sprang back to true when the pressure was released.
     At first I thought the pry bar would poke and catch on clothing, but after a while I forgot it was there until it was needed. We used it to grind away mortar between stone blocks and to scrape out the mortar around a steel door set into concrete before ripping the door from the wall. I carry a fire starter and paper money rolled tightly in the hollow space under the green canvas Micarta® handle slabs. The HEST balances well, feels good in the hand, is small, sharp, tough, and, at 4.9 ounces, performs above its weight class.

    The HEFT 6 (pictured at top splitting wood) has a 5.75 inch blade of Uddeholm Sleipner, is 10.4 inches overall and weighs 10.2 ounces. It has a combination striker and pry bar at the butt. We gave the knife a heavy month-long workout during which we used it to split a stack of 2x4s, chop through a stand of saplings, cut sheet metal, and pry open a locked steel gate. After that, and with only a quick edge touch up, I loaned it to a professional butcher, Shawn Carlson. Shawn used it for a week, during which he broke down a beef carcass, dressed out a couple dozen slabs of ribs, a stack of pork roasts, bacon and assorted other meat products. He also sliced up 20 rib slabs and split 15 chickens.

    “This is a well-designed knife with a comfortable handle,” he assessed. “It’s easy to work with and doesn’t fatigue your hand during a full day’s work. Unlike some sharpened pry bars, this knife has a fine point that allowed me to easily get into muscle and separate it from connective tissue. I didn’t need to touch it to a sharpening steel even after chopping through joints and cartilage.”—by James Morgan Ayres

 

*Editor’s note: Licensed To Kill is an insightful and entertaining look into the lives of military contractors, especially during the height of the Iraq War. It may not change your opinion of such contractors but it definitely will enlighten you as to what it was/is like to be one.

 

 

DPx Specs

 

DPx Gear

attn: Robert Young Pelton

Dept. BL7, 2321 Kettner Blvd.

San Diego, CA 92101

888-233-3924

619-780-2600

www.dpxgear.com

Specialties: Utility fixed blades and folders

Blade Materials: Uddeholm Sleipner and D2 tool steels, German Lohmann Niolox 1.4153.03 stainless steel, and 1095 carbon steel

Blade Finishes: Black texture powder coat, milspec black, stonewashed, and black satin TiCN PVD

Handle Materials: Green canvas Micarta®, olive drab G10/titanium, black G10 and Brazilian Santos wood

Geared Up: Features on some models include a wire breaker, a tiny pry bar at the butt, glass breaker and a bottle opener; all versions of the HEST and HEFT have a storage compartment under the scales

DPx FYI: Specific models are designed by Robert Young Pelton and/or Pelton in conjunction with Tom Novak and Tommaso Rumici, and made by Ontario Knife Co. and Lion Steel

Sheaths: Leather and DeSantis Kydex® models

MSRP Range: $123.75 to $275

 

For more on the latest knives, knife legislation, knifemaking instruction, knife trends, knifemakers, what knives to buy and where and much more, subscribe to BLADE® Magazine, the World’s No. 1 Knife Publication. Click on http://www.shopblade.com/blade-magazine-one-year-subscription-us/?r+ssfb062612 for more information.

 

Video: Interview with Jim Behring of Treeman Knives

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Fun Gun Gear Presents: “Treeman Knives”. Jim Behring Started out making Hand forged knives, but after a number a SEAL Team 4 members had him make their personal knives, he’s now making a complete line of High quality Combat knives for real world hostile enviorments. Interview at the 2012 Blade Show, Atlanta, GA.


Get started in knifemaking with the new book, BLADE’s Guide to Making Knives, Volume 2. Click here to check out this information-rich resource.

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