Crook knife recommendations

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Tommyd345

Nomad
Feb 2, 2015
369
4
Norfolk
Hi all,

Iv tried out a mora double sided crook knife (I think it's the 164?) and it's ok but Its just not working for me.

I was wondering if anyone can recommend me any? I like a double edged one so its two in one :)

40 quid maximum (if that's possible)

Thanks all!
Tom
 
I highly recommend This community's Dave Budd for crook knives, I got a left and right handed and find them great.

like you I started with the two edged mora, whic ironicly enough snapped about half way around the curve, and I've gotten on great with it since.

I also recenlty handled a lauri hook blade, but have yet to use it in anger, so can't ettest to it yet.

atb,
Ste
 
I got on great with my Mora after removing the beveled adge. I got a Dave Budd hook and then another on. then I purchased a left and right which he does with a curved cross section. (They have been polished and just need handled 2 year on:o)

Sure there will be more opinions soon.
 
There's enough of a sweep to make farrier's knives quite useful, revise the bevels to 12 degrees.
PacNW crooked knives are surface hafted. The handles don't get in the way like a more scandinavian, center-hafted blade.

One merit of this long-standing bladesmith is that you can buy the blades and haft them on handles which fit your hands.

http://kestreltool.com/index.html
 
I've seen the farrier's knives from 10 different brands. They are all very similar, I guess, in order to do the job required.
Some Pacific Northwest native carvers use them. That's how I went in that direction. I have Mora (Sweden), Diamond (Taiwan), Ukal (France) and Hall (Canada).
Plus four of "Haida-style" blades. All surface-hafted into my own handles except for my original pair of Mora 171.
The traditional design is double edged, many shapes/sweeps and commonly a pointed sharp tip.
What did I learn about the farrier's blades?
1. Revised to 12 degrees, any and all of them are OK for carving soft cedar and much harder dry birch.
2. A skinny blade is better than a wide blade for carving around inside tighter circles.
3. Single edges are good = change hands and push on the dull spine of the blade with your other thumb.
4. Factory handles are just fine for a lifetime. I wanted to explore the PacNW handle shapes so I hafted many of those blades in my own handles.
5. New Hall farrier's knives are $50 each for me. I can drive 5 miles out of the village and buy a used Hall from our local farrier for $5.
 
Those Kestrel knives look very well made. I have a mora 163, modified, ground off the edge, and it works very well now. But my favorite is my Ben Orfod mocotaugan.
 
Thanks for the link to SDjarv. Their prices are reasonable. Very pleased to see that you can buy blades alone (let a bladesmith BE a bladesmith)
to haft in handles which fit your hands. Typically center-hafted, a Scandanavian characteristic.
PacNW blades are surface hafted in which I think that there's an advantage for carving.
 

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