Interesting info gents!,surprised to hear that about the Kellam Josh!
Thanks.
Chris.
apparently stainless dosent work for fire steels half as well as carbon steel personaly i have a triker with my steel allmost useless as its 2 small really but i would never use a steel on any knife i owned, just hate the mess it leaves.
""as for bright orange clippers at meets it goes with my Pink cammo jacket"" FGYT Quote...well robin williams said if you got to go to war clash but that takes the cake![]()
its all personal preference though i've read a lot of siberianfury's posts pouring scorn on the woodlore's cutting and slicing ability but i don't see ray mears struggling to use his.
personally i've never had any problems with woodlore style knives i've got 3 and they've done everything i've asked of them no problem, whereas with my old clipper it did struggle to split wood and the edge retention was nothing to write home about.
also i'm not sure doing 2 tests that both favour thinner blades is a fair review and in the cutting test you had to assist the mora.
rant over lol![]()
thinner blade cuts better thats just how it is, unless of course the thicker blade has very high grinds, the woodlore doesnt.
its just mechanics at the end of the day.
the test shows how the knives work, beleive what you want, ive made my opinion clear.
What I don't get is that you say the clipper is better for radius cuts, but they are both similar widths from edge to spine so how are they really different? I'm not convinced to be honest, I wouldn't mind getting my mitts on a Woodlore style knife to see if it really is as bad as you say. I think it is possibly overly thick for no apparent reason, but apart from that it looks like it should be a decent knife for backwoods use.
To be a completely fair test, you would need to sharpen both knives and then subject them to a rigorous amount of testing doing the same thing over and over in the same materials to see which has the best edge retention. Once that is complete you could turn on to the actual tasks, so make a bunch of simple tent pegs in the same material with each knife, then split a load of the same wood with both knives, cut a number of different notches in the same wood with both knives and on and on ad infinitum.
Cutting two bits of scabby wood isn't really a frank and thorough test!