Wilkinson Sword Dartmoor Knife: What to do?

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Stringmaker

Native
Sep 6, 2010
1,891
1
UK
Just in case there are some peeps who don't know what one of these is:

http://www.dartmoorknife.co.uk/dart...-p-267.html?osCsid=8i8s5gbrp6d993ic7n3rhd3nf1

This is the example I currently have.

I bought it purely for what it represented to me in terms of a classic tool made by a classic company, well before I got involved in my woodland school volunteer project. My problem is that I have never used it and it seems a waste. There is an element of Crocodile Dundee about it to be honest........"That's not a knife, THIS is a knife!" which is why I bought my little Mora for practical use.

My options are:

1. Sell it.
2. Keep it and get a decent edge put on it then use it.
3. Keep it for its own sake and not use it.

What would you do?

Incidentally, I had forgotten quite how much it is worth.
 
I think these go for around £10-£15 these days. If i was you I'd select the 'sell it' option. I may know a buyer ;)

Nice try!

I have to admit that I am erring towards getting an edge on it then using it. My next problem is that I am very much a novice sharpener and wouldn't want to ruin it!
 
Why not give Longstrider a pm dude, im sure he would be able to get it to a superb edge:D that would be nice and easy to maintain, or even guide you through doing it yourself!
 
personally i'd leave it alone, maybe get a little cabinet as southey suggested, i'd have thought that it'll work out as quite a good investment eventually

stuart
 
Put an edge on it and use it, its what it was made for, or make a nice display case with a little of its history noted in there too and pass it down the family:)

+1 on the sharpening and using!

to be fair, even i think the dartmoor is basically an answer to what was actually a rhetorical question! but it is a very misunderstood tool. i did chuckle when i read a comment here, (ages ago) to the effect that "a woodlore is a much more capable tool than a dartmoor" :lmao: capable of what exactly? i have both, there are more jobs that i could do with a dartmoor that a woodlore would struggle with than vice versa. as the paul kirtley review points out, you do need to understand your tool and learn how to use it.

perhaps i should send mine off to visit jon and southey as part of the big knife review..... fellahs?

the paul kirtley review was excellent btw, thanks for that.

cheers, and.
 
+1 on the sharpening and using!

to be fair, even i think the dartmoor is basically an answer to what was actually a rhetorical question! but it is a very misunderstood tool. i did chuckle when i read a comment here, (ages ago) to the effect that "a woodlore is a much more capable tool than a dartmoor" :lmao: capable of what exactly? i have both, there are more jobs that i could do with a dartmoor that a woodlore would struggle with than vice versa. as the paul kirtley review points out, you do need to understand your tool and learn how to use it.

perhaps i should send mine off to visit jon and southey as part of the big knife review..... fellahs?


the paul kirtley review was excellent btw, thanks for that.

cheers, and.



OKAY!
:D You've twisted our arms!
 
lol! pm postal address please.

btw, mine has been race-tuned a bit. it'd be interestin' to compare the modded version to the standard.

cheers, and.
 
'88 I think I bought mine. It was just after Combat and Survival did a feature on it.

That was back when I thought 'one size fits all' with knives.

It works for some people, not for me. I have a tree feller, a skinner now etc.
 

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