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Knife Test: Alan Blackwood’s D3 Skinner

The blade of Alan Blackwood’s field-grade skinner shows some of the smudges from the test administered to it by BLADE® field editor Kim Breed.

Alan Blackwood’s D3 Skinner Tackles Deer, Squirrel and More

By MSG Kim Breed, 5th Special Forces (retired)

    As hunting season was fast approaching, I told knifemaker Alan Blackwood I would like to test one of his new and improved skinners. I received a knife that looked good and felt even better. Now to the woods to see how the skinner performs.

Squirrels ‘n Such

As luck would have it on the whitetail side, I was striking out—not good for the knife or me. However, I did manage to remove some nuisance squirrels from Mrs. Elder’s house that were chewing holes in her log cabin home. The skinner’s blade easily parted the squirrel skin so I could finish the cleaning. The wide blade came in handy while removing the heads and tails, keeping my fingers away from the cleaning board while applying pressure to crunch through bones.

    While the squirrels soaked, I did some cutting tests. I stropped the edge to clean it up and started in on some dense foam. The knife has a sweet spot for cutting right at the blade belly. The dense foam parted easily with a nice, slick pull cut. Since I was at the cutting board already, I grabbed some 3/8-inch sisal rope. Crunch, crunch, crunch—man this steel really cuts rope aggressively! After 83 cuts I had a little sliding going on and noticed the edge had a wire burr. A few strops on the leather took care of it and the edged was back to hair-popping sharpness.

    As long as my list of honey-do’s was keeping me out of the woods, I had a new batch of pine to cut and whittle. I really like the way the skinner feels for whittling. The knife is very easy to control and, when I wanted to power cut, the wide blade bit even better. The rounded-off handle really form fit my hand as I applied pressure—and then I hit a hard knot. The blade still cut but the convex edge wanted to roll away from the knot. No problem. I opted to use a soft-blow hammer to drive the blade through the knot. It worked and there was no damage to the edge.

    As I was on a roll and not hunting, I decided to do the brass-rod edge-flex test. I did not know how the blade’s D3 tool steel would handle it as it was the first time I had tested a knife of D3. With gloves and safety glasses on, I pulled the edge across the brass rod. A little hump formed and followed the stroke of the knife to the tip, then returned to normal. The edge did not chip or stay bent—a perfect flex test result indicating spot-on heat treatment.

Skinning/Quartering Marathon

We had a little cold snap and that changed my luck. I harvested two does on a Monday and two more the following Wednesday. It was time to see what the skinner could do. I was in for a skinning-and-quartering marathon! The skinner was aggressive on the skin and meat. I was able to skin and quarter four good-sized deer in two hours, which is fast considering I could hang only one at a time and had to return to the backyard to fetch each deer carcass. After I washed the blade, it would still shave hair.

    The little skinner comes with a nicely tooled 8-ounce, vegetable-tanned leather snap sheath by Steve Stapleton of B&E Shoe Service. The sheath really makes the skinner pop.

Great Hunter Package

As far as skinners go, this is a great one. It stays sharp and is very comfortable in the hand. It is a great package for any hunter.

For more information contact Alan Blackwood, 32082 Sidehill Rd., Rutland, OH 45775 740-742-2431 e-mail [email protected].

KNIFE SPECS

Knife: Field-grade skinner

Maker: Alan Blackwood

Blade Length: 3.25”

Blade Material: D3 tool steel

Rockwell Hardness: 58 HRC

Handle: Micarta®

Overall Length: 7.25”

Sheath: 8-oz., vegetable-tanned leather snap model by Steve Stapleton

Maker’s List Price: $125

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.

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Cutting Demonstrations with Mastersmiths Cook, Williams, and Fisk

Master Smiths JR Cook, Mike Williams, and Jerry Fisk demonstrate the cutting potential of their forged blades on water bottles, rope, cans, and an apple. To …

Georgia Knife Preemption Becomes Law July 1

Georgia Governor Nathan Deal has signed a most important bill for knife owners and the knife industry. With his signature, Knife Rights reported, SB432 establishes knife law preemption in Georgia beginning July 1, effectively repealing draconian restrictions on knife ownership, sales and manufacturing in cities like Atlanta, home of the BLADE Show, the world’s largest knife show.

    One word of caution! Please note that the new knife preemption law does not go into effect until July 1, so BLADE Show attendees should remain cautious this year, as the old laws remain in effect until the beginning of July. The BLADE Show is June 8-10.

    Thanks to the members and supporters of Knife Rights who made their support known to the legislature and governor and to the bill sponsors, Georgia Senator Bill Heath and Georgia Representative David Knight.

    Knife Rights’ Director of Legislative Affairs Todd Rathner worked very hard from well before this year’s legislative session started in order to pass the bill and get it signed.

    For more information, click on www.KnifeRights.org.

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. For subscription information click on http://www.shopblade.com/product/blade-magazine-one-year-subscripti…?r+ssfb050712#BL1SU.

Take the BLADE® Quiz and Get Sharp!

When knife enthusiasts think Knifemakers’ Guild, thoughts of Blade Magazine Cutlery Hall-Of-Fame© member Buster Warenski cannot be far behind. His gold dagger includes a gold separator band between the guard and also a gold pommel. The handle is carved antique ivory with twisted gold wire. The engraving is by Julie Warenski-Erickson. (from the Dave Nittinger collection; photo by Dave Siegel)

From One Cutlery Cradle To Another

 

The first BLADE Quiz focuses on Sheffield and the early days of the Knifemakers’ Guild

 

ARE YOU UP ON YOUR KNIFE HISTORY, especially the golden age of Sheffield and the beginnings of the Knifemakers’ Guild? Our first installment of a new BLADE® department, the “BLADE Quiz,” should let you know how schooled you are in short order. The answers appear below.

    1) The very early Sheffield knives carried the stamp “GR.” To what/whom did the initials refer and what were the knives better known as? A) Green River and Green River Knives; B) King George and Green River Knives; C) Great Britain and Green River Knives

    2) Knifemaker Ted Dowell served as a gunnery officer on which U.S. Navy ship during the Korean War? A) U.S.S. Minneapolis; B) U.S.S. Missouri; C) U.S.S. Intrepid

    3) How many cutlery factories were in Sheffield in 1910? A) 400; B) 1,400; C) 4,000

    4) Which Guild knifemaker was known early on by the moniker of “El Lobo Solo” (Spanish for “lone wolf”)? A) Chubby Hueske; B) Ruffin Johnson; C) Clay Gault

    5) Upon completion of 50 years of service, each Joseph Rodgers & Sons Ltd., employee was presented with: A) A 5-inch-tall silver statue of Vulcan holding the Rodgers trademark of a six-pointed star and a Maltese cross; B) a replica of the world-famous Rodgers “Year Knife”; C) a gold watch

    6) The obverse side of the blade is: A) the front or display side bearing the maker’s mark; B) the side without the maker’s mark; C) the blade spine

    7) Knifemaker Red Watson’s first name was A) Red; B) Herbert; C) Quinton

    8) In 19th-century Sheffield, the men who worked knife grinders feared: A) grinder’s asthma or grinder’s consumption; B) shattering grindstones, which could kill a worker; C) A and B

    9) Who stated, “Is knifemaking an art? I feel that anything done well is an art, be it a Rembrandt, a custom knife, or the Golden Gate Bridge. In short, what is art? More important, what isn’t?” A) Bud Cronk; B) Buster Warenski; C) Harvey McBurnette

    10) A cross guard has: A) Two quillons; B) one quillon; C) no quillons.

    11) According to The Knifemakers Guild Directory of the Membership, Bob Dozier is the son of: A) a blacksmith; B) an ironworker; C) a farrier

    12) The tool used by many Sheffield cutlers to put inlay holes in mother-of-pearl scales or to drill holes in scales is known as the: A) stidder or stiddy; B) parser or parsey; C) doller or dollie

    13) The first female knifemaker to apply for membership in the Knifemakers’ Guild was Carolyn Tinker, at the 1974 Guild Show. However, there was also another female maker who applied for membership at the ’74 show. Her name? A) Mary Jean; B) Ethel Waters; C) Rita Winter

    14) The term pocketknife originally referred to: A) a knife with blades opening at one end only; B) any knife that could be carried in a pocket; C) a knife that was always handy and could be used for any number of cutting chores

    15) Which of the following is not a founding member of The Knifemakers’ Guild? A) Jon Kirk; B) John Applebaugh; C) John T. Smith

    16) In old Sheffield, a bolster was cast or forged from nickel, iron or brass and had a projection used to tommy it to the liner. In this instance, to tommy means: A) to pin; B) to rivet; C) to solder

    17) Xylonite was the first of many types of imitation: A) bone; B) ivory; C) pearl

    18) Knives with handles made by burning an imitation tortoiseshell pattern into clear horn with lye were known as: A) spotted penknives; B) shell knives; C) turtle blades

    19) The Deguello, the tune Santa Anna adopted to signify no quarter would be given to the defenders of the Alamo, was originally used by: A) the Moorish invaders of Spain; B) Christopher Columbus; C) the Spanish conquistadores

   

 

Answers: 1) B; 2) B; 3) C; 4) B; 5) A; 6) A; 7) C; 8) C; 9) C; 10) A; 11) A; 12) B; 13) A; 14) A; 15) C; 16) B; 17) B; 18) A; 19) A. Scoring: 0-3—Your tongs just got gonged. 4-7—Have you considered foregoing knives and taking up Farmville? 8-12—You’re spending too much time playing mumbley-peg. 13-16—Your knife neurons are starting to fire. 17-18—You are qualified to run for mayor of The Pit at the BLADE Show. 19—You must be Pete Cohan, curator of the National Knife Museum.

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. For subscription information click on http://www.shopblade.com/product/blade-magazine-one-year-subscripti…?r+ssfb050512#BL1SU.

 

Knife Of The Day XXIII: Abalone Case Peanut for Mother’s Day

NOBODY APPRECIATES A SHARP UTILITY TOOL LIKE MOM—and all the better if it’s pretty. The Case abalone peanut is just the ticket for Mom on Mother’s Day.

The swirling abalone scales are very attractive and the clip blade and scissors—all in a 2 7/8 inches-closed package that weighs in at a scant 1.2 ounces—will give Mom all the cutting and snipping power she needs on her special day.

For more information click on www.wrcase.com.

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 here for a subscribe to BLADE Magazine.

Strange Blade Brews

Darrel Ralph outfits his assisted-opening DDR Gun Hammer 3-D Alpha in a 3.95-inch blade of stainless damascus with a Stellite 6K core by Chad Nichols. The frame is Nichols 3-D-carved Moku-Ti titanium damascus. Ralph’s list price: $3,500. (knife photo courtesy of Darrel Ralph)

Some of today’s alternative blade materials may change the way you look at knives

By Pat Covert

TO MOST KNIFE ENTHUSIASTS, THE WORD STEELis so closely associated with blades it would be hard to describe a knife without it. After all, since its earliest known production about 4,000 years ago, in one form or another steel has ruled the roost not only in cutlery but so many other things that pervade our lives.

Simply put, steel is everywhere. Unfortunately, most versions of it rust.

Progressive thinking in the knife arena has led to a boom in the technological aspects of blades, which includes those of materials that do not rust or rust very little in comparison to stainless steel. (Stainless steel resists corrosion but is not impervious to it.) In the process, cobalt-based alloys such as Stellite®, Talonite and Cobalt Dendritic have received attention. Other materials such as laminates using titanium and carbon fiber, as well as ceramics, also have been used to good effect.

Frost on a Windowpane

Not a common metal, most of the world’s cobalt is mined in the Republic of the Congo. Today, most cobalt is used in corrosion-resistant “super alloys,” which are particularly suited for gas turbine and jet aircraft engines.

David Boye has been making knives for over 40 years. He offers fixed blades and folders for use around saltwater and other rust-inducing environments. He has used dendritic material exclusively since 1980 because he says he prefers its strength, cutting performance, ease of sharpening, and ability to cast roughly to shape.

(Editor’s Note: For a better understanding of forging various metals into blades, check out The Complete Bladesmith: Forging Your Way to Perfection, pictured at left.)

“Dendritic is the kind of pattern [damask] which naturally forms when a carbon alloy cools after smeltering,” Boye explains. “It looks like frost on a windowpane.”

According to many knifemakers, the finer the blade’s grain structure, the better it cuts. Boye supports the opposite view.

“These relatively large, rooted and fully bonded carbides produce microscopic teeth along the cutting edge, and this is what actually does the cutting,” he notes. The combined attributes of extreme cutting performance, no rusting in seawater and being non-magnetic so it does not affect a compass or electronics make the material ideal for the ocean environment. “We have used dendritic cobalt for over 15 years and have received virtually zero chips, broken blades or complaints,” Boye says, “and many customers have raved to me about the blade performance.”

He states that the material’s downside is each knife design requires a set of porcelain molds which are challenging and/or expensive to make, the mold created for each individual blade has to be discarded after only one use, the casting alloy is costly, and the waiting time for blades from the foundry can be lengthy.

Damascus Hybrid

Chad Nichols is a large supplier of damascus to the cutlery industry and has pioneered a new blend of patterned steel using cobalt 6K, commonly known as Stellite, and stainless steel—particularly AEB-L and 304. “The interesting thing about the 6K cored steel is that the cobalt alloy itself does not have to be heat treated to retain edge-hold abilities,” he observes. “The only reason the material needs to be heat treated is for corrosion resistance [for the stainless steels in the damascus] and for etching purposes.”

Nichols outlined several attributes of the hybrid damascus, “The addition of the cobalt-based alloy increases its durability and oxidation resistance,” he states. “The cutting performance of the 6K damascus is great. It’s a workhorse of a steel for cutting and can retain a razor edge even under the most vigorous conditions.” As for the disadvantages of the material, there are two. “The blade material is expensive. You already have a relatively high cost for the damascus and then you add the 6K which, pound for pound, costs more than the handmade damascus,” Nichols says, adding, “It’s not a lot of fun to make, either!”

“Won’t Crack Under Flex”

The book on modern laminate blades using metal bonded to synthetics was co-authored by knifemaker Warren Thomas (also, see page 114, August 2011 BLADE®). He indicates he began making laminate blades in 1991 using stainless steel and carbon fiber. Shortly thereafter he substituted titanium for steel, creating a lightweight, zero-magnetic knife. Thomas says he uses a “trade-secret” chemical bond that positively adheres the two materials.

“My laminates have half the weight of a steel blade, absolute zero corrosion, won’t crack under flex, and don’t micro-fracture under heavy stress along the cutting edge like steel blades do,” he explains. “To improve the performance of the blade, I weld tungsten carbide along the cutting surface to enhance the edge retention. This gives it a toothy edge that improves the cutting performance.

“There is no chance of corrosion using carbon fiber and titanium. Both materials are impervious to common destructive forces like sea salts, body sweat, and other elements that wreak havoc on steel,” he notes. “Steel knives have a very hard time cutting some synthetics, such as Kevlar™. My knives actually cut these materials quite well due to their ability to saw through them.”

Laminated blades do have their disadvantages. “In very rare circumstances, the blade can delaminate. I’ve had this happen approximately a dozen times in 20 years and have always corrected the problem for the customer,” he says. “Due to the direct cost of the state-of-the-art materials involved and the time spent fabricating the laminates, there is a higher cost for my blade over steel. However, you get what you pay for.”

That’s Edge Retention!

Ceramic blades are made by taking zirconium oxide—also known as zirconia—powder, compacting it under intense pressure, and heating it in blanks at high temperatures in the 1,400° Celsius range. The blades are much more common among kitchen knives, and for good reason. For straightforward slicing and dicing they are extremely effective, but for lateral blade movement with torque, such as for prying, they tend to snap or shatter.

Boker Knives has never shied away from thinking outside the box, and its ceramic knife line not only includes kitchen knives but tactical and everyday carries as well. “If used as intended, ceramic blades will outperform steel,” Boker USA CEO Dan Weidner says. “In an independent lab test performed comparing ceramic to steel, technicians measured the amount of pressure required to cut through a standard piece of cardboard. After 1200 cuts the pressure required to cut using the ceramic blade was the same as the first cut, while the identical task using a steel blade showed decline after 400 cuts.” Now that’sedge retention!

Ceramic blades also have other benefits over stainless steel, including corrosion resistance. “This is one of the prime advantages of ceramic,” Weidner opines. “It cannot rust, which is why it’s used so often in maritime and military saltwater environments.”

There is also good news on the economic front. “Initially the cost of ceramics was on the high side, but now there are sufficient manufacturers producing the material to put the price point in the same range as good, quality steel,” Weidner says. Moreover, ceramic blades are non-magnetic.

Is One For You?

The strange brews in blade technology are not for everyone, but they offer a wide range of features, including either no rust or a huge reduction of same, zero magnetism, weight reduction and enhanced edge holding. Granted, there are downsides in some instances, though apparently not enough to discourage enough buyers of the blade brews outlined herein.

Is there an alternative blade in your future?

For more on alternative blade materials such as Spyderco’s H1, Strider Knives’ Nitinol, and Bohler-Uddeholm’s Vanax 35 and 75, see page 68 of the April 2011 BLADE®.

 

Also be sure to check out BLADE’s Guide to Making Knives.

 

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. Subscribe to BLADE magazine.

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