The perfect Bushcraft knife!

  • Hey Guest, Early bird pricing on the Summer Moot (29th July - 10th August) available until April 6th, we'd love you to come. PLEASE CLICK HERE to early bird price and get more information.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Hoodoo

Full Member
Nov 17, 2003
5,302
13
Michigan, USA
That sounds good Sal. I think it's important to remember, though, that where a lot of knives fail for bushcraft is in the handle. It needs to be wide enough to give plenty of support for the hard use of woodcraft. Nothing gets your attention more than to try to carve seasoned hard wood with a narrow, poorly contoured handle. It hurts. That's why even carving knives with small blades typically have large handles. BTW, I'd vote for 3 mm. :)

Also, I would make the secondary bevel a small one. It's easier to get rid of. :D
 

tarmix101

Member
Nov 25, 2005
44
0
51
Washington State U.S.A.
It sounds great. I have never used a knife made out of 52100, but look forward to it. As far as thickness, I would go for 3mm. Just my preference. Thanks Sal :You_Rock_

Look forward to the pics.....
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,714
1,960
Mercia
Sal,

Another one for 3mm mate!

I'm with hoodoo on the handle! As it happens, I do quite like the blade layout on the Grohmann boat knife, but that handle gives me the shudders - I't be quicker to list whats right than whats wrong (I speak as a bloke who owns a Grohmann skinner). I'm sure its great for its purpose, but its not right for my bush knife

Red
 

Andy

Native
Dec 31, 2003
1,867
11
38
sheffield
www.freewebs.com
There seems to be a difference in the US UK way of doing things. It seems a lot of people in the US want a flat grind knife which then needs to be a bit thicker to keep teh strength up while most of us in the UK want 3mm thick blade but one which is 3mm for about half the depth. I wonder which is the stronger format.
 

Shinken

Native
Nov 4, 2005
1,317
3
43
cambs
I actually am begining to quite like knives that are a lil squarish, the f1 is a little too squarish i think. 3mm is also my ideal for a flat grind 4mm is better with hollow grind me thinks.

the replies in this thread just go to show how personnel a knife is, what feels confortable to one isnt to another!
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,714
1,960
Mercia
Aaah but you just voted for sal to stick with 3mm flat ground! Cheers Ash (pssst tell him you really fancy 25mm width too :) )

Red
 

demographic

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Apr 15, 2005
4,694
711
-------------
The "perfect" knife is the relativley unexpensive one that you carry with you...

The three hundred quid one crafted from finest unobtanium with the vanishingly rare exotic hardwood handle that's left at home cos it's "too nice" to use is about as much use as an ashtray on a motorbike :rolleyes:

It's amazing that prehistoric man managed to evolve modern levels of sophistication without owning any one particular type of knife, perhaps they were just far more adaptable than us... ;)

On to the "handedness" of the sheath, why not just make a certain amount (about 13-15% if THESE figures are anything to go by) of the sheaths for southpaws and offer a factory exchange policy on new sheaths so if someone buys a knife they can exchange sheath for the right one?
If they buy a secondhand knife then they will have to buy it instead cos otherwise the factory ends up with loads of secondhand sheaths.
That was you don't have an ambedexterous sheath that looks like a right dogs dinner.

Also the knife should come from the factory with a few scratches on it to stop people poncing around with them ;) , a bit like Land Rovers should have a few factory installed dents and dings so people who buy em don't just do it to pose in Tesco's carpark and never take em offroad.
 

sal.

Member
May 31, 2006
27
0
81
Golden. Colorado, USA
I guess 3mm it is. Sometimes I'm easy, at least that's what my wife, Gail, says. ;)

Hi Hoodoo,

I'l be hand carving the handle myself to get the ergos comfortable. There has been some discussion on handles being too thin, so I need more input.

Best heigth?

Best thickness?

Blades are for cutting. Handles are for holding. They do not, IMO, have to be "balanced" to the eye.

I realy appreciate the input on the project. It's this kind of project that makes the job fun.

sal
 

Nemisis

Settler
Nov 20, 2005
604
6
70
Staffordshire
Sal handles are more individual than blades in the majority of cases the one thing most agree about is that it should be stablised, many like liners and a lanyard tube. Why not do like many custom makers here and make two versions 1) fully finished 2) a finished blade,sheath and blocks, liners,bolts etc for those wishing to build and finish there own handle? Works out cheaper for you in production costs and the buyer gets a semi customised knife.
Dave.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,714
1,960
Mercia
sal. said:
I guess 3mm it is. Sometimes I'm easy, at least that's what my wife, Gail, says. ;) sal

:You_Rock_

:approve: :approve: :approve: :approve:

Best heigth? 1 11/4" across the ricasso (30mm)

Best thickness? 3/4" to 1" (16 to 22 mm)

Length 4 1/2 " (110mm)

Thats right for me, but I have been accused of "girly hands" - oh and it must be contoured!


Red
 

Naruska

Need to contact Admin...
Apr 15, 2006
101
1
54
Finland
sheath-wise, the J.P.Peltonen Ranger knife is the most versatile I have ever bumped into...available left- or righthanded, can be hung from the belt, strapped horizontal, or hung upside down on a shoulder strap...and the knife (capable of making feathersticks or digging a trench...)is easily withdrawn and replaced with one hand at all times...no need to fiddle with buckles etc...

Marko
 

Martyn

Bushcrafter through and through
Aug 7, 2003
5,252
33
58
staffordshire
www.britishblades.com
sal. said:
After many drawings and "soft" models based on input here and other forums, we do have a "pattern" made of a "bushblade". Nothing is decided yet as I'm still waiting on some outside designs.

It's not quite a spear, but dropped a little more than a drop point.
The blade length is just under 100mm.
Blade depth is 29mm.
Point is 12mm below spine line at rear.
Thickness on the model is 3mm, but I think I'd like to go 3.5mm.
Handle length is 123mm.
Material is 52100 carbon steel.
Model is full flat grind with 32 degree edge, 59Rc, I wanted to do a CATRA test
on Monday and needed something to test.
I'll try to post a pic on Monday for your thoughts. (need help on pics)

This will also give Red, Tiffers & team some idea of the direction.

sal

Sounds good Sal, well apart from the full flat grind. Can I ask why you chose that grind?

For woodworking, I'm a to the core fan of the scandinavian grind. I just havent come accross anything yet that can match it for that task. I'm not saying it cant be matched, just that I havent come accross it yet. I'm not trying to be awkward, just curious. You've obviously taken a design choice to buck the trend, I'm curious about the rationalle for that?

Ta.
Martyn.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,714
1,960
Mercia
Martyn,

Is this grounds for a poll to help sal out? Sort of

- Scandy
- Full
- Convex
- Hollow

Summat like that anyway?

Red
 

Andy

Native
Dec 31, 2003
1,867
11
38
sheffield
www.freewebs.com
Labrador said:
A. Wright & Sons in Sheffield were designing a Bushcraft :
maybe someone on here said there might be a market for one ;)

I'm glad Sal has gone for 3mm and not 3.5
my design came out at 27mm with a 3mm thick blade and scandi grind with a drop of 12mm

as for the handle I'm a fan of ones which flair out slightly. My scandi has little drop behind the little finger which stops it sliding through my hand when chopping with it. I'd like a fishtail type shape if looking at teh handle from above as well. The F1 has this a little bit but the handle is a little thin.
For the most part I think the handle should be about the same heigh as the blade, maybe with a little bit of curve at the top (star at same height as the blade and raise a couple of mm and then drop back down slightly below the spine height where the handle flairs outwwards.

I think I;d find it far easier to just cut a handle shape from styrofoam and send a 3D modle to you.
 

British Red

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Dec 30, 2005
26,714
1,960
Mercia
Andy,

Could you make the whole knife out of styrofoam and post a pic? Not grind obviously but the hilt in context of the blade always helps! I like the sound of the fishtail, but I think images really help the imagination challenged (me)

Red
 

Andy

Native
Dec 31, 2003
1,867
11
38
sheffield
www.freewebs.com
not until I get back to sheffield at least. It may be possible for me to knock up a profile design once I get back though. rough shape could use ply wood for the blade and glue on something that I could shape for the handle
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE