Anyway, back to the Hellion...
I thought making stakes and wooden spears was one of the important things you should be able to do with a survival knife. So I had a go. A few quick swings using my new found drawing/slicing/chopping action worked wonders and was quick and efficient. More than I would have thought achievable half an hour back...
Not exactly the best wood for producing feathersticks. Very green and hard. But the results, produced from the edge nearest the handle... superb. In fact, excellent. The saw edge did get in the way slightly and made for an uncomfortable left hand grip. But you can live with it I suppose.
Now was the time to test THE MOST HATED aspect of survival knives. The sawback. Now I know that saw backs aren't really meant to saw, but create notches. So I had an open mind and set to work on a 4cm thick piece of green wood....
... well, it worked well for the first 8mm, then stopped. No amount of pressure or sawing would get it any deeper...
I tried again. Sod that!
In the first ten seconds of sawing, it achieved all it could. Great for notching wthout effort. No use at all as a saw.
Trying to do really fine work on the edge nearest the guard was also a no go. The blade is too thick and it really could have done with a different grind here. That possibly may make a world of difference to it. With the one it had, I have up. Impossible for me to control to any degree.
There is so much more to this knife and it has surprised me as being well thought out, if a daft ninja looking design. Most features I haven't covered as it doesn't fit the bushcraft remit and falls into combat and real survival against human opposition.
I would love to cover that aspect here, but it would be inappropriate. Save to say that the knife is very well made and surprisingly tactile and ergonomic in function. It is not a bushcraft knife as such, or even a wilderness knife per se. But it is a survival knife.
Mykel Hawke has an amazing amount of military and survival experience and this is exactly the knife I would expect from a mind like that. Yes it looks like a comedy knife designed for the Rambo fruitbaskets, but it isn't when you get it in your hand. And you really do need to handle it to judge it. Going off looks alone is impossible with this blade.
This is a true SURVIVAL knife, that knife you need when you are on the run, frightened and with no other option than to defend and survive. In military circles it is a knife to have in your pack. In bushcraft circles, it is a novelty with some camp use only. It has it's place. And, although mocking every atom of its existence before I touched it. I have to concede, it is a good knife for the purpose it was designed (although, again the sales blurb is politically correct and fails to explain any of this).
I quite like it. And would want one if recent events escalated or I was behind enemy lines or an RAF pilot. But this is not what the forum is about. So for the role of 'shrafting, it is awful. As a pure survival knife, I think it excells.
On that thought, I opened a 58 pat bottle of local made cider and watched the wildlife, and sun set...