Titanium Hatchet?

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@ £100+ I suspect that the majority of these shall join the vast tribe of shed queen axes out there.
 
There are some reviews from people saying they like it, though of course I can’t verify if they’re real or not.

Perhaps it’d be fine for clearing overgrown trails and chopping small bits and pieces around a camp? Trying to work out what the use case is.

I have to say my instinct is one of skepticism though, Titanium has never been the first metal that comes to mind as suitable for a hatchet. I wouldn’t want to write it off completely though if others have found it works.
 
I am not willing to entirely rule out that there could be a case for a lighter head that occupies the same volume as a heavier steel head…but….
The consistent use of deceptive marketing language in the advertising makes me think the aim is sell to the uninformed rather than make a practical high performance tool.

The yield strength line, 120kpsi = 827MPa, which is higher than some steel, higher than the 420 stainless used in cheap hardware store axes, but not the steel one would get from Hults or Gransfors.

They claim the blade is triple honed, while a similar steel axe is completely dull and must be sharpened by the user. Seriously?!?
They claim steel axes come without sheaths, and have handles that cannot be replaced. All the axes I have bought have sheaths and I have replaced three or four handles…it’s what one does!

The case for a titanium axe or hammer is that certain dimensions are needed for certain jobs. You need a given thickness in order to split, you cannot just keep thinning a steel head to reduce weight without altering the geometry. Similarly, lighter steel heads tend to be smaller, less edge length and less bite depth. Depending on task, a lot of effort in wielding an axe can be used by controlling torque and over swing (follow through). A lighter head can help with this. For splitting I don’t think there is much case for that light a head, but for cutting, maybe.

Mostly I agree it’s a gimmick, like most fishing lures are really meant to catch fishermen more than fish! Stick titanium in something and it will sell.
 
I once handled a Ti divers knife, owner said that he sharpened it as well as he could. It felt kind of sharp but it did not cut well.
Admittedly an axe does not work like a knife but I still think that steel probably has an advantage there.
I think C_C is right that in many cases an axe head has to have a certain thicknes to work well and that might lead to slightly heavy heads at times.
An Fe/Al combination might be a solution if that is the case. It would take some testing to determine a reasonable combination of materials and dimensions.
 

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