A Real Good Knife

Derius_T

New member
Sorry mods if I posted this in the wrong area, but didn't see where else it would fit.

I am looking for a good, muti-purpose, fixed-bladed knife. Something along the style of the ka-bar maybe. I am not really up on new knife technology, and want something tough. Something that will hold a great edge, and won't rust. I want something that can double as a pry bar, digging tool, hammer, WHATEVER I need it for, without having to worry about it breaking, chipping, ect. Can anyone point me in a good direction?

The post isn't exactly firearms related, sorry, but this forum is my best source for an educated answer.
 
Buck 110 about as tough as I need, kind of heavy and thick but a work horse.
many to chose from, one tends to end up with a drawer full, trying to find "the one"
not to worry they make good trade goods and spur of the moment gifts my nephews
are always hapy with a knife of any kind:D
 
Knives are for cutting, not for chopping, hammering, digging, or prying. There is no knife that I know of that can do all those things without chipping or breaking. If you don't treat the blade with a certain degree of respect, its going to quit being a knife and start being a mangled piece of steel.

I guess the best thing would just to buy something cheap, and replace it after you have abused it beyond the point of usability.
 
Any knife used for prying will most likely snap the tip off,a tanto blade is good but will still break.
As a hammer goes you are gona use the butt of the knife not the blade.
Everything will rust,saltwater will do a number on the blade no matter what finish you get,clean your knife!
Very sharp blades are common,holding a edge is relative to what your cutting with it,you WILL have to sharpen it no matter what.
Caution some blades are brittle that have VERY sharp blades,they also lose that sharpness quickly.
You didnt say anything about blade length or size/wieght ,along with price range so i cant help you there.
You might look at the cold steel sight and look at the bowies they offer.
Are you willing to pay big bucks for a quality knife that you will make look like a demolition car if you use it like you say you are?
Dont mean to be harsh just the reality of whats out there.
 
Thanks for all the responses, I will check them all out.

The thing is, I don't really care about price, but I don't want to pay more than my carry rig for a knife. :D

But I understand knives, and their use and care, I just want one that will stand up to the OCCATIONAL type of abuses that I mentioned. I'm not going to hammer, pry or chop with it as the norm, but I want it to be able to withstand the punishment if need in a survival situation. I mean, what happens if for whatever reason, that knife ends up your only available tool? I want it to perform, and perform hard and well.....maybe I expect too much, but I know such a blade has to exist out there. And as far as blade length, I'd say 6in would be maximum useful length. (maybe too long...?)
 
Also check out http://www.fehrmanknives.com/knives.htm

I recently picked up a "Last Chance". Amazing piece of work! I bought the "satin" model, but you can get a black crinkle finish which would provide much more corrosion resistance.

Blade Size : 5.5" x 1.68" x .25"
Overall Length : 11"
Steel : CPM-3V
Hardness : 57-59 Rc
Handle : Linen Micarta, Cushioned
Standard Cost : $ 240 (Black Crinkle Finish)

DSC08601sml.JPG


http://picasaweb.google.com/Nine204/Fehrman02?authkey=6W1lR0NuSb0
 
For most of my fixed blade use, I have a decent khukuri. Then again I do alot of chopping and wood work with mine and work in the garden and camping so the chopping ability is important to me as the cutting ability. Sure its big and heavy, but it's machete type qualities are a big plus for me. I have smaller blades to do other work, but normally find between this and a multitool I am fairly well prepared for most stuff.
 
Think what you want the knife mostly for- 'multi purpose' knives are not really good at anything.

The K-Bar is a fighting knife that will serve double duty as a survival knife. As will something like the Cold Steel SRK neither have much use as butchers tools.

Whereas the Puma White Hunter has the same blade profile as the British Army Wilkinson Sword survival knife, and is an acceptable skinning knife.

Most people go over the top about blade length and the suggestion earlier about the Buck 110 is a very good one- one simply does not need a long blade for most things. The Buck is a good quality knife that will last a life time and do most things anyone has any business doing with a knife. If a fixed blade knife of similar dimension is wanted have a look at the Puma Hunters Pal.

Do yourself a favour- don't use your knife as an alternative to a crow bar or jimmy- you will just snap the tip, and trying to chop with it (other than very selectively) will chip bits off the blade. These activities are 'NO No's to any knife user- if you want to chop invest in a machette or axe.
 
I will look at all the links, thanks tons guys. And Daggit, its not that I want to habitually chop, hammer, or pry with my knife, but if it gets down to it and I NEED to, I want a knife that will hold up, and not leave me holding two pieces the first time I need to use it to open a can or pry on something in an emergency.
 
I agree with you Tourist. My strider has never once failed in anything, the only thing is that the stripes have faded to look even more awesome, i have the BN Black
 
I own a Razel myself. And yes, it lives up to its reputation. If anything, I'm not a straight blade guy, and I seldom use it. When I do, it performs.

DSC00212.jpg
 
I'd recommend something like Fallkniven F1 but you won't be sorry with a Strider or a Busse. Personally I like my Puma White Hunter. Check out www.knifetests.com to see these and others really put through the paces. They do destruction tests and it's amazing how well some knives can withstand insane abuses designed to specifically ruin a good knife.
 
My personal favorite do all knife is Buck Skinner, I think the # is 109. I have only gone through one in 18 yrs and I just bought my second. Easiest blade I found to keep an edge on, and nearly indestructable.
 
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