A good knife for under a tenner?

Donny

Member
Jan 7, 2008
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0
39
Northampton, UK.
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Hi all. I was wondering if there are any knives out there that will be good for all round use for under £10?

I hear the Frost Mora's are good value for money, are there any others you would recommend?
 

Woodcutter

Full Member
Feb 6, 2006
727
41
54
Kent
The clippers are good too, if you want more grip. But I agree that for less than a tenner you won't beat a frost. I have quite a collection of knives, some quite expensive, and some I have made myself, and I always find myself reaching for my mora, it certainly always goes with me in the woods, either as my primary or backup.
 

andy_e

Native
Aug 22, 2007
1,742
0
Scotland
Prefer the handle on the Clipper myself, but for less that a tenner it's a great knife. Your only decision should be - do I get it in Carbon or Stainless ;)
 

Chainsaw

Native
Jul 23, 2007
1,389
158
57
Central Scotland
I think I have one of the winchester knives, the non-limited edition. It's now relegated to living in my car with the rest of my emergency kit. It doesn't go out with me any more. I went for the stainless clipper and it's a great knife, and it's my backup when I go out. The winchester looks better but IMHO does not cut or hold an edge as well. You can see a wee comparison here.

Cheers,

Alan
 

rancid badger

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
clipper carbon very easy to get razor sharp.

your right there, I was just thinking that for the money, it's probably the ideal knife to learn sharpening skills on as well!:)
R.B.
note for clarification here:
I use frosts Mora's-the basic green "training knife" for our bushcraft events here at Chopwell Wood and without exception all 25 were very sharp when delivered. They still are after some fairly severe "student abuse".
The point I'm trying to make about sharpening skills is that you far better learn how to sharpen on an inexpensive knife than a more costly one!;)
 

andy_e

Native
Aug 22, 2007
1,742
0
Scotland
Same here, Carbon - unless you're out on the seashore a lot and even then you just have to make sure you take good care of your knife, making sure it's dry after each use and wipe it down now and then with a bit of oil.
 

John Fenna

Lifetime Member & Maker
Oct 7, 2006
23,307
3,090
67
Pembrokeshire
Stainless is the work of the Dark Forces, designed for eating fish with and not a patch on honest carbon!
Dayglo orange? - a sin against nature and only justifiable for emergency kit - Bushcraft is not an emergency!
Clipper! a travest....hang on - I quite like the clipper!
:D
Not as good as the Mora though....
If you search you can also get wood ("Barrel" shaped) handled knives by Jonsson(sp?) of Mora for under a tenner - carbon steel, rat tail tang - but I always rehandle them....and their sheaths are NASTY!
 

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