Here in the communist state of Michigan the gubmint says we can't carry a fixed blade unless we're hunting, fishing or camping. So I'm always hunting, fishing or camping.
Hear ya loud and clear from across the Great Lakes in NY. It’s the same rule for switchblades here, gotta be hunting or fishing, cuz we all know very well, switchblades are the “go too” knife for any and all outdoors activities. lol I mean really, these draconian knife laws are just so silly. I also don’t think I’m allowed to have anything over 4 inch blade. Let’s not even talk about our insane restrictive gun laws. But I digress…knives are most certainly tools and should be treated as such in the eyes of the law. I’m not aware of any slip joint plyers laws lol now if you’ll excuse me, I have to get back to my drafting of an obsidian bill, I’m sending to my local congressman, banning that stone for open carry…😂😊
The Air Force knife is known as the PSK, Pilot’s Survival Knife. The sawback is not made to saw wood, but aircraft aluminum skin. We used them in SERE training in the AF, but it is just an ok knife. Not my first choice now, or even when I flew. I have one, but mostly for nostalgic purposes. Thanks for the videos!
After many years of collecting knives, I realised that the best survival knives are puukko and leuku. You might say they are not full-tang, and you will be 100% right! The thing is that they are so versatile and comfortable in almost any possible scenario. Whenever I do something with a knife, it's a puukko or leuku knife.
I really like to have a SAK with me - my favourite is a Victorinox Compact that has a blade, scissors, a pen, a pin (and few other tools) - really useful set of tools for an urban environment. A great thing about a SAK is that people don't feel threatened when you take it out.
Bought an F1 in the 90's at the recommendation of a writer I really respected. It was issue to the Swedish Air Force at the time. Mine came with a kydex sheath. Carried it on day hikes through the wilds of the Carolinas for a few years with it mounted to the bottom of my day pack where no one appeared to be the wiser. It worked very well. In 2002 we visited my Father in Law up in Alaska. With the airline restrictions in place at the time we shipped some stuff early out to my FIL; one the item was my F1. During the trip we had occasion fish for trout and my FIL caught a huge trout but he didn't have a knife to process the fish. I whipped out my F1 and in a few strokes the fish was cleaned and wrapped and into the freezer of the RV. I doubt his body temp was ever above 45 degrees before he went into the oven a couple of days later. The F1 has a stout spine but the edge remains scapel sharp.
The fixed blade knife I love the most is a full sized Kephart pattern, something like an LT Wright Genesis in a saber grind, but the fixed blade knife I EDC religiously is a simple Mora Eldris. It drops down in one of the spare magazines pockets of my cargo pants and sticks out just enough to both be handy and not legally concealed. And it does indeed handle 95% of tasks I need a knife for. In a perfect world, we'd all open carry bush swords. Until then, the Eldris is a great constant companion.
Excellent video sir! I am one of those knife nerds. Up until maybe 15 years ago I had never spent more than 50 bucks on a knife. The first time I did, I spent almost 200. I started reading alot more about steels, heat treats, and grinds. Having said all that, it really is simply preference. At the end of a full day of carving around a campsite, I'm either sharpening standard steels, or honing super steels. It takes me about the same amount of time for mantinance. Of my two current go to fixed blades one is 1095 and one is 3v. In addition to not purchasing something labeled "survival ", I'd like to add. If the packaging has a picture of a guy in a tac-vest, a big "don't purchase "! Sorry to be long winded.
I'm with JJ on this... the ''best survival knife is the one in your hands''... and your last adventure proved it Jason...(...'' bush chisel''... lol what a joke!... but it works! )
We have so many good knives to choose from these days. Way back - more than likely before you were born when about the only option we had was the Air Force survival knife. I remember trading one to some boy scouts for food during Ranger school survival training. It was totally worth it.
I always have a spiderco or a Al Mar folding knife on my person. If I know I’m going into the woods, I always have a large knife (5 inches +) and a small knife (3 inches or less). The small knife being used for fine whittling and carving chores, the large knife is used for wood processing or self defense.
"It's my knife, and I will use it for all sorts of things!" When I was in college, a lot of the young men in our program carried knives with them because, as you said, they are multi-purpose tools. At the time, though, me being a city a kid, I thought it was weird that so many people would carry knives on them outside of self-defense. After watching videos like this one, I now see why they carried knives with them wherever they went.
"Folders have points of failure" Cold Steel has entered the chat 😂 I carry a CS Recon 1 (rotate between the Tanto, Spear Point and Clip Point), works great for just basic every day tasks and also for hard use. If i need to be a bit more fancy, suited and booted, i have a CS Code 4 in my jacket pocket. Usually have a fixed blade like the CS Kobun in my bag. For outdoors - hiking, camping,bushcraft- my Gerber Strongarm has never let me down. Heck, that thing crowbarred a car door open a few years back when we stopped on the highway to help people involved in a car accident. I've got a ton of "safe queen" EDC and "bushcraft/survival" knives that tend to just sit in a case while fall back on carrying and my CS knives, my Strongarm, my Glock field knife or even my Ruike Jager.
I am with you, I've used every knife I own a ton. For every task, even the tracker for food prep. I see it this way if your get a knife for the long term event and that's what you got you should know if it will do what you need to survive.
You know what, I found a great Walmart Special Knife that came in their "survival kits", but it's a full tang blade and it's easy to sharpen. Can do staving and feathering with it, and it's super light! I have it as my Do-All Knife on my "Work Belt". Better yet, has a paracord handle and is less than $10 if bought by itself.
Some good points. Also consider buying and trying out different knives to know what you like and how to use your knife. People forget that the knowledge behind the knife matters way more than the knife itself.
The best option, is a TRC Mille Cuori + Victorinox Spirit X or Swiss Tool. Small package,maximum versatility,best quality and the maximum performance. Can't get any better, literally.
TRC Mille Cuori would be my go choice if I only had to choose only one knife for sure,nothing beats the quality,comfort,balance and versatility of this knife imho, one of the best knife steels I have experienced
My thoughts here will address what may be needed (IMO) in potentially the roughest of times: survival in the wilderness, urban, suburban, and rural areas to deal with life-threating attacks from animals and people as well as to use for general cutting, slicing, and chopping tasks around your home, vehicle, travels, and/or at your wilderness camp location during a survival (SHTF) period: • Blade edge: Long straight cutting edge with an arching belly for slicing, cutting, and skinning. • Blade grind: Flat or saber for edge strength. • Blade spine: .25 can be too thick and heavy, .125 can work, and .20 is good. • Blade length: 4” up to 6” is good. Below 4” is short. Have the blade length that allows the point and blade edge to be easily controllable with the arm and wrist; some people can control a longer length. • Blade point: Positioned at the centerline of the knife for instinctive use as an extension of the arm and wrist. It has a point with enough metal behind it that it will not break when twisting the blade. • Blade steel: 1095 or T1 tool steel requires cleaning of all moisture and oiling to prevent rust; they can also require sharpening often, after heavy use. I am currently using the following knives and steels: MagnaCut steel Buck 663 Alpha Guide Elite or the Buck 663 Alpha Guide Pro with the S35VN steel; NIOLAX steel LionSteel T5 model from Germany on a knife made in Italy and offered by BladeHQ; and the CPM 3V steel LionSteel T6 model offered by BladeHQ. • Sheath and handle: Good knife retention if you fall or tumble, allows for a firm grip of the handle to remove the knife from the sheath, and the sheath allows for wearing/positioning as you want. Has a handle that fits your hand with no “hotspots” as well as a surface that holds your grip. Securely fastened through the full tang of the knife. • Pommel: Has a pommel that can break a vehicle’s window and for non-lethal defensive strikes. • Balance: Has a weight balance located at the finger choil, and it has a finger guard in front of the choil to prevent your hand from slipping onto the blade during a forward- or reverse-grip thrust (penetration strikes). • Camp use: Can prepare food (cutting, slicing), firewood (making a hardwood wedge for splitting, beaver-chewing, feather-sticks, etc.), and shelter (cutting, notching) preparations. Can clear small trees and branches as well as be used to craft/make camp related items (stools, tables, chairs, pot-hangers, tripods, meat sticks, etc.). • Substance: Can kill, clean, skin, and prepare meat for food and pelts for coverings. • Defense: enough penetration to reach vital organs and sharp enough to cut through hide/skin, clothing, and meat/muscle to reach major arteries and the trachea (blood and air flow). I have a lot of other knives that I love to use at specific time, which I have used for decades. The three mention in this post fit the bill (for me) of knifes that meet a true SHTF Survival scenario (the two LionSteel knives are the best (IMO), the Buck 663 if good for non-wilderness general survival use but able to handle wilderness if needed).
I spent 22 years in Airforce Special Operations, and while pilots used the AF knife, it was not used by Special Operations Operators. Different knives for different purposes.
I am glad you didn't mention a Kabar BK2 as a survival knife. It's one of the most over hyped knifes on TH-cam. That said, I do own a Kabar BK16, BK14, and BK21. So I am not opposed to Kabar or Becker knives.
Hey brother, don't think the serrations on your F1 are for roots. I believe that is primarily for cutting through sheet metal in case of a downed pilot. The knife you showed next had good root serrations (longer and deeper). Great selection of blades, good sir!
I’ve carried and used every knife I’ve ever owned. I give away the ones that don’t fit well. There are some that I keep coming back to, but most of them are distributed in all the many backpack-kits that I’ve spent the last 40 years making. (It’s sort of a hobby) I edc a TOPS Brakimo so I’m not worried about my knife if I find myself in a predicament. Except for getting stranded in the jeep in the middle of nowhere, I don’t really see myself getting into a “survival” situation. And I don’t drive in the middle of nowhere as much as I used to.
I carry a folder basically all the time unless I’m camping or travelling then Im using not to far away from a fixed blade I think the main thing is people should carry good quality stuff and not complete trash for instance I like my Chris reeve folders but I know for a fact a cheap cold steel folder would be a lot stronger but I’m not planning on falling trees with a folding knife worst case I use a saw in my Swiss Army knife right tool for the right job but don’t by shit
Good info! 2 suggestions for improvement: 1. consider adding knife names on screen each time you show a knife; it'll help us search for the knife 2. consider linking affiliate links in description, so we can quickly go check out the knife we want and you get a commission for the sale
For "survival" and firsthand use, the USAF survival knife isn't worth two dead flies. Yes, the blade is tough and really bomb proof. However, the stacked leather grip can and will come apart. The steel will not break unless you're using it in some sort of unusual task like fighting Excalibur. So beware of the handle and the rust catcher on the bottom of the sheath, and you're good to go. At least for using it in Thailand, UT, NKP, Korat, etc.
I used to be a folder guy but as I've gotten older I've realized nothing beats a fixed blade. I carry an ontario rat 3 gobar for work then I have a rotation of fixed blades I carry outside of work. all my fixed blades ride in my pocket with an ulticlip
Love the falkkniven f1 had 2 so far but my choice is 4 to 5 inch d2 or the full carbons . But iv used huge 10 inch blades I love my case Bowie but small is more usable and comfortable
I think the best survival knife is one that has a 1095 Cro Van blade with a Saber Grind. Folders, oh no, not for me. I like serrated edges; they are great for making feather sticks.
I have a CS Survivalist for about €90,-- Now, I really like the looks of Esee6 a lot, but they cost more than 2 times the price, about €210,-- over here. Sincere question : Is the Esee6 really 2 times 'better'? Stronger? Tougher? Stays sharp longer? Or are there better options for that kind of money? Thanks in advance to all responders! Greets from the Netherlands 🇳🇱, TW.
I use the leather-man wave with a metal sheath I think is kinda cool but looking for a more fixed blade classic look I guess am trying to say my wave in a metal sheath looks so utilitarian
The Tom Brown Tracker is fool proof on carving feathersticks out of ANYTHING but it’s not a capable fighting knife like the Tops SXB by EJ Snyder… The Esse Juglas looks like a really good balance between a nimble defense tool and a capable chopper… The Ontario Marine Raider Bowie is discontinued because douche bags wanna buy cheap Chinese steel gimmicks…. The Channel Joe X is undisputable about showcasing the most durable blades…. Cold Steel SR-1 is a really good affordable small folder…. Mineral Mountain Hatchet Works and Work Tuff Gear make extremely tuff blades…. Cold Steel and K Bar are ok but I trust Tops more but they’re expensive. …. If I know anything, you need a full tang chopper like the Juglas and something to featherstick unless you’re good enough to do fine work with a huge blade… I personally think The Tom Brown Tracker is the best for it’s size. It has both a huge sabre and a finer grind in one tool with a functional notching saw and it’s indestructible… it just doesn’t have a hand guard for defense
It’s funny you and a lot of guys praise the Glock knife. It’s standard issued for danish military and I can tell you we do break alot of them.. I can tell you haven’t dig alot of trenches with this knife, cos you would know that the saw on the back of the knife is so bad as the old Rambo knifes… sorry I love your channel but Glock knifes shouldn’t be on any list for survival it’s a fighting knife not a general purpose knife for outdoor
You get what you pay for, if you’re cheap you get a cheap steal and or sheath. If you’re real go mid range money wise. Or go up in cost and get the best steal and sheath.
Bush Kitty 🐈 is such a drama queen 👑 😆.... Those newer Swiss tech Stahlern don't break the bank, easy to sharpen and doesn't lose it's edge easy. If you lose it or break it then it's not hard to replace wnd the contour and edge profile isn't bad. Other than that I used a gerber prodigy straight edge. You could open the side of a battle ship 😂
Unless you know how to use it, even the best knife in the world is useless. Mors Kochanski and Ray Mears could be given a Mora 511 and they would run circles around the average “survivalist” in the woods. Besides, most survival situations happen when you’re least prepared for them. Survival sucks. Most folks are simply prepared for inconvenient camping situations.
If I have to grab one knife heading out the door for survival it would be the Gerber Strongarm. Hard to break the blade, I can sharpen it. What can you do with a broken blade? Ounce for ounce, dollar for dollar the fake Strongarms off Temu or AliExpress are the best knife. IMO $10 - $15 for an near indestructible knife. I don't have any knives over $100 so can't say but for now it's the Strongarm. Not perfect but tough.
jfyi, the "ontario" you have there, is a very cheap copy of the real thing. The serration is also not meant to be used for sawing through anything else than thin air-plane aluminium.
I live in Rhode Island and I can't carry anything over 3 inches long according to the laws I'd love to carry my kabar fixed blade but it is 7 inches long
I carry a Victorinox Explorer Swiss Army Knife for EDC but slip joint knives are dangerous unless, like me, you are used to them and careful not to fold them onto your fingers. Though I might be caught with only this little multi-bladed knife, it is NOT a survival knife ! Survival knives should be suitable for fighting off people and animals, general bushcrafting, game processing, fishing, food preparation and emergency medicine. Good possibilities include : Esee 5 ( 1/4 " thick and designed for helicopter pilot survival), Kukris by Cold Steel and KaBar, Old Air Force Pilot knives by Onterio and others ( attached sharpening stone on sheath, bolt pommel for hammering but needs shapening to be sharp ), British MOD Survival Knife ( 1/4" thick and rugged but needs sharpening out of the box), Glock Field Knife, Tops SXB and SXS , Woodman's Pal, Mil. KaBar. The key features to consider are : an easy to draw sheath, versatility, ruggedness, blade length of at least 5", hand guard or resistance to sliding hand up blade, use in type of wilderness you will be hiking through and added features you might want ( Think TOPS SXB, SXS---- and Tracker knives by various makers). Carry a belt-pack survival kit and forget about gimmicks like attached junk on sheaths and hollow handles.
I have a folder that I carry with me twice a day when I walk my dog, it not an expensive knife but it opens very easily one handed, it locks open nice and tight and I can clip it on the waistband or pocket of anything I’m wearing walking around a suburban area surrounded by forest,mountains and trails. It’s concealable as not to scare any of my soft neighbors but big and strong enough to take care of anything I might encounter close to home. When I go in the bush I always carry a fixed blade though. And when I’m in the city I have a light duty Benchmade bugout in my waist or pocket or a razor sharp Civivi. So small concealable folder around people and a solid fixed blade for the wild and a larger sturdy folder for my suburbs.
I hate when people say the best knife is the one you have on you. Yes we know that even with guns but this helps make a choice to GO AND BUY A KNIFE FIRST so you can actually carry it and use it.
I bought a tom brown tracker years ago and thought cause it's Tom Brown it's good but it seemed over built and almost useless.looks cool but the knife sux. I bought a bk 9 and that was better. I do have a mora, condor kephart, bk 19, and 7 that I like. I think that the Tom Brown tracker is gimmicky. What's surprising is it has Tom Brown on it.
The concept of a "survival knife" is crippled in any way. You don't usually plan on surviving, but when you do, you normally take a big chunky "survival knife" with you. But after that, you will not carry it on you all the time, and then, suddenly, you could be in a survival situation. "But hey, now I don't have my survival knife!"
I find after all my years of training from boyscouts to ranger school and a few other schools in the military. If i get into a survival situation something went seriously wrong. Most situation that would be uncomfortable can be avoided with basic common sense and listening to that little voice. The number one saying back in Bat. "Proper planning prevents piss poor performance " Expect the worst to achieve the best Anything that can go wrong will go wrong and always at the worst time. They are saying to remind you always plan never quit.
Whoever butchered that Buck 110 should be flogged. Obviously, their daddy always bought them new toys when they broke their old ones. That knife's condition shows a complete lack of respect for an iconic American knife. Shame!
I’ve lost too many knives because of the clip.. They just grab the vines in the woods.. A good sheath is just as important as the blade.. The main thing for me is the experience that comes with using all of them over the years and understanding how to overcome the deficiency of the tool (whichever one you have) when you need it.. I certainly favor a good full tang fixed blade these days though.. As far as that goes, I find you get what you pay for the majority of the time.. Other than writing a book here, I’m a knife whore 😂
If a folder is all i have going into a wooded area ill usually go inside the waistband with my belt over the pocket clip. Either appendix or 3 o'clock depending on where I've got my T-rex.
if you get the RIGHT multitool, with the right blades, it beats ALL belt knives to hell. Get a Leatherman Crunch, and toss out the SS serrated knife blade, the Phillips blade and the SS file. Replace the knife blade with one made out of an Old Hickory paring-knife. Add two real -deal Nicholson files, , one a 3 sided file the other a flat file. Alter the tool to be taken-apart and reassembled with no other tools. Grind the end of the vise grip jaws to a needle nosed configuration. Alter the small flathead blade to be an awl, needle and twin edged drill blade. Alter the medium flathead to be a scoop knife and a chisel. Alter the end of the 3 sided file to be a gouge. The vise grip holds one of my 3 different saw blades. A knife is just a knife. It can't do even 1/4 of the things that the modified Crunch can do.
steel matters don’t know how you can make a choice on a knife not knowing the steel because blade maintenance matters is it stainless will it rust do i need a daimond field sharpener etc. and serrations stay sharp longer and that gerbers like ten bucks
Use a tack rag made from cloth with a little BreakFree CLP to keep your knife oiled to prevent rust in the field. Store the tack rag in a heavy duty Zip-Loc bag. ( Eezox" actually edged out BreakFree in a test ).
Gonna have to be more specific on "KaBar". If you mean the USMC fighting knife, then yes it has a rat tail tang and its not gonna take the abuse you think it will. But, KaBar is a brand, and i can tell you some of the bk models are pretty stout.
Here in the communist state of Michigan the gubmint says we can't carry a fixed blade unless we're hunting, fishing or camping. So I'm always hunting, fishing or camping.
Hahaha! Sounds almost as bad here in freedom hating nanny state England
''concealed carry'' is the answer then... just don't ''flash'' it!
Australia we are not allowed to carry a knife at all. Not that we need one to cut the watered-down gruel they feed us in the covid retraining camps.
Hear ya loud and clear from across the Great Lakes in NY. It’s the same rule for switchblades here, gotta be hunting or fishing, cuz we all know very well, switchblades are the “go too” knife for any and all outdoors activities. lol I mean really, these draconian knife laws are just so silly. I also don’t think I’m allowed to have anything over 4 inch blade. Let’s not even talk about our insane restrictive gun laws. But I digress…knives are most certainly tools and should be treated as such in the eyes of the law. I’m not aware of any slip joint plyers laws lol now if you’ll excuse me, I have to get back to my drafting of an obsidian bill, I’m sending to my local congressman, banning that stone for open carry…😂😊
Exactly! Keep doing what nanny says, and you won't even be able to leave your room
The Air Force knife is known as the PSK, Pilot’s Survival Knife. The sawback is not made to saw wood, but aircraft aluminum skin. We used them in SERE training in the AF, but it is just an ok knife. Not my first choice now, or even when I flew. I have one, but mostly for nostalgic purposes. Thanks for the videos!
that was the first blade I ever had... awsome steel... [mine was brown though]
Gerber Strongarm is a good cheap choice.
After many years of collecting knives, I realised that the best survival knives are puukko and leuku. You might say they are not full-tang, and you will be 100% right! The thing is that they are so versatile and comfortable in almost any possible scenario. Whenever I do something with a knife, it's a puukko or leuku knife.
I really like to have a SAK with me - my favourite is a Victorinox Compact that has a blade, scissors, a pen, a pin (and few other tools) - really useful set of tools for an urban environment. A great thing about a SAK is that people don't feel threatened when you take it out.
Bought an F1 in the 90's at the recommendation of a writer I really respected. It was issue to the Swedish Air Force at the time. Mine came with a kydex sheath. Carried it on day hikes through the wilds of the Carolinas for a few years with it mounted to the bottom of my day pack where no one appeared to be the wiser. It worked very well. In 2002 we visited my Father in Law up in Alaska. With the airline restrictions in place at the time we shipped some stuff early out to my FIL; one the item was my F1. During the trip we had occasion fish for trout and my FIL caught a huge trout but he didn't have a knife to process the fish. I whipped out my F1 and in a few strokes the fish was cleaned and wrapped and into the freezer of the RV. I doubt his body temp was ever above 45 degrees before he went into the oven a couple of days later. The F1 has a stout spine but the edge remains scapel sharp.
The fixed blade knife I love the most is a full sized Kephart pattern, something like an LT Wright Genesis in a saber grind, but the fixed blade knife I EDC religiously is a simple Mora Eldris. It drops down in one of the spare magazines pockets of my cargo pants and sticks out just enough to both be handy and not legally concealed. And it does indeed handle 95% of tasks I need a knife for. In a perfect world, we'd all open carry bush swords. Until then, the Eldris is a great constant companion.
Excellent video sir! I am one of those knife nerds. Up until maybe 15 years ago I had never spent more than 50 bucks on a knife. The first time I did, I spent almost 200. I started reading alot more about steels, heat treats, and grinds. Having said all that, it really is simply preference. At the end of a full day of carving around a campsite, I'm either sharpening standard steels, or honing super steels. It takes me about the same amount of time for mantinance. Of my two current go to fixed blades one is 1095 and one is 3v. In addition to not purchasing something labeled "survival ", I'd like to add. If the packaging has a picture of a guy in a tac-vest, a big "don't purchase "! Sorry to be long winded.
True words. Stay away from the gimmics those are for newbees or impressional teens.
I'm with JJ on this... the ''best survival knife is the one in your hands''... and your last adventure proved it Jason...(...'' bush chisel''... lol what a joke!... but it works! )
👊🏻🔥👊🏻
You have to buy a knife first to carry it on you and this helps pick a knife you are going to carry.
@@cocovasquez1 yes... ''you'' should start with that first...
We have so many good knives to choose from these days. Way back - more than likely before you were born when about the only option we had was the Air Force survival knife. I remember trading one to some boy scouts for food during Ranger school survival training. It was totally worth it.
Fan of the Esee 4 is my go too if not just running around town. Good discussion points.
Agreed - F1 is a really good knife.
I always have a spiderco or a Al Mar folding knife on my person. If I know I’m going into the woods, I always have a large knife (5 inches +) and a small knife (3 inches or less). The small knife being used for fine whittling and carving chores, the large knife is used for wood processing or self defense.
"It's my knife, and I will use it for all sorts of things!"
When I was in college, a lot of the young men in our program carried knives with them because, as you said, they are multi-purpose tools. At the time, though, me being a city a kid, I thought it was weird that so many people would carry knives on them outside of self-defense. After watching videos like this one, I now see why they carried knives with them wherever they went.
"Folders have points of failure"
Cold Steel has entered the chat 😂
I carry a CS Recon 1 (rotate between the Tanto, Spear Point and Clip Point), works great for just basic every day tasks and also for hard use.
If i need to be a bit more fancy, suited and booted, i have a CS Code 4 in my jacket pocket.
Usually have a fixed blade like the CS Kobun in my bag.
For outdoors - hiking, camping,bushcraft- my Gerber Strongarm has never let me down. Heck, that thing crowbarred a car door open a few years back when we stopped on the highway to help people involved in a car accident.
I've got a ton of "safe queen" EDC and "bushcraft/survival" knives that tend to just sit in a case while fall back on carrying and my CS knives, my Strongarm, my Glock field knife or even my Ruike Jager.
I am with you, I've used every knife I own a ton. For every task, even the tracker for food prep. I see it this way if your get a knife for the long term event and that's what you got you should know if it will do what you need to survive.
I don’t understand how there isn’t so many more views! This channel is amazing!!
Thanks!
Talking about knives, survival and not depending on the state is naughty
You know what, I found a great Walmart Special Knife that came in their "survival kits", but it's a full tang blade and it's easy to sharpen. Can do staving and feathering with it, and it's super light! I have it as my Do-All Knife on my "Work Belt". Better yet, has a paracord handle and is less than $10 if bought by itself.
humble blades are the best buddies...
Is it a Camillus? I was really impressed with the little folder I have.
Some good points. Also consider buying and trying out different knives to know what you like and how to use your knife. People forget that the knowledge behind the knife matters way more than the knife itself.
The best option, is a TRC Mille Cuori + Victorinox Spirit X or Swiss Tool. Small package,maximum versatility,best quality and the maximum performance. Can't get any better, literally.
TRC Mille Cuori would be my go choice if I only had to choose only one knife for sure,nothing beats the quality,comfort,balance and versatility of this knife imho, one of the best knife steels I have experienced
@@greekveteran2715 in!
My thoughts here will address what may be needed (IMO) in potentially the roughest of times: survival in the wilderness, urban, suburban, and rural areas to deal with life-threating attacks from animals and people as well as to use for general cutting, slicing, and chopping tasks around your home, vehicle, travels, and/or at your wilderness camp location during a survival (SHTF) period:
• Blade edge: Long straight cutting edge with an arching belly for slicing, cutting, and skinning.
• Blade grind: Flat or saber for edge strength.
• Blade spine: .25 can be too thick and heavy, .125 can work, and .20 is good.
• Blade length: 4” up to 6” is good. Below 4” is short. Have the blade length that allows the point and blade edge to be easily controllable with the arm and wrist; some people can control a longer length.
• Blade point: Positioned at the centerline of the knife for instinctive use as an extension of the arm and wrist. It has a point with enough metal behind it that it will not break when twisting the blade.
• Blade steel: 1095 or T1 tool steel requires cleaning of all moisture and oiling to prevent rust; they can also require sharpening often, after heavy use. I am currently using the following knives and steels: MagnaCut steel Buck 663 Alpha Guide Elite or the Buck 663 Alpha Guide Pro with the S35VN steel; NIOLAX steel LionSteel T5 model from Germany on a knife made in Italy and offered by BladeHQ; and the CPM 3V steel LionSteel T6 model offered by BladeHQ.
• Sheath and handle: Good knife retention if you fall or tumble, allows for a firm grip of the handle to remove the knife from the sheath, and the sheath allows for wearing/positioning as you want. Has a handle that fits your hand with no “hotspots” as well as a surface that holds your grip. Securely fastened through the full tang of the knife.
• Pommel: Has a pommel that can break a vehicle’s window and for non-lethal defensive strikes.
• Balance: Has a weight balance located at the finger choil, and it has a finger guard in front of the choil to prevent your hand from slipping onto the blade during a forward- or reverse-grip thrust (penetration strikes).
• Camp use: Can prepare food (cutting, slicing), firewood (making a hardwood wedge for splitting, beaver-chewing, feather-sticks, etc.), and shelter (cutting, notching) preparations. Can clear small trees and branches as well as be used to craft/make camp related items (stools, tables, chairs, pot-hangers, tripods, meat sticks, etc.).
• Substance: Can kill, clean, skin, and prepare meat for food and pelts for coverings.
• Defense: enough penetration to reach vital organs and sharp enough to cut through hide/skin, clothing, and meat/muscle to reach major arteries and the trachea (blood and air flow).
I have a lot of other knives that I love to use at specific time, which I have used for decades. The three mention in this post fit the bill (for me) of knifes that meet a true SHTF Survival scenario (the two LionSteel knives are the best (IMO), the Buck 663 if good for non-wilderness general survival use but able to handle wilderness if needed).
Love your take on "survivalknife" You use what you got if you get lost.
I spent 22 years in Airforce Special Operations, and while pilots used the AF knife, it was not used by Special Operations Operators. Different knives for different purposes.
I am glad you didn't mention a Kabar BK2 as a survival knife. It's one of the most over hyped knifes on TH-cam. That said, I do own a Kabar BK16, BK14, and BK21. So I am not opposed to Kabar or Becker knives.
Hey brother, don't think the serrations on your F1 are for roots. I believe that is primarily for cutting through sheet metal in case of a downed pilot. The knife you showed next had good root serrations (longer and deeper). Great selection of blades, good sir!
My favourite "survival knife" is my Estwing hatchet. Solid one piece drop forged chunk of awesomeness. A great piece of kit to keep on your belt .
I’ve carried and used every knife I’ve ever owned. I give away the ones that don’t fit well. There are some that I keep coming back to, but most of them are distributed in all the many backpack-kits that I’ve spent the last 40 years making. (It’s sort of a hobby)
I edc a TOPS Brakimo so I’m not worried about my knife if I find myself in a predicament.
Except for getting stranded in the jeep in the middle of nowhere, I don’t really see myself getting into a “survival” situation. And I don’t drive in the middle of nowhere as much as I used to.
I carry a folder basically all the time unless I’m camping or travelling then Im using not to far away from a fixed blade I think the main thing is people should carry good quality stuff and not complete trash for instance I like my Chris reeve folders but I know for a fact a cheap cold steel folder would be a lot stronger but I’m not planning on falling trees with a folding knife worst case I use a saw in my Swiss Army knife right tool for the right job but don’t by shit
Good info!
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Esee 5 or 6 with the Esee pouch on the kydex sheath stuffed with everything you need. That's my go to for survival knife.
I sell knives, and I started cheap and wasted my money. Now I go mid range monetarily or I go higher range and I make real good money..
For a folding knife I have my trusty Ontario Rat 1. Nothing special. But it works. If I can carry a fixed blade I will any time over a folder.
For "survival" and firsthand use, the USAF survival knife isn't worth two dead flies. Yes, the blade is tough and really bomb proof. However, the stacked leather grip can and will come apart. The steel will not break unless you're using it in some sort of unusual task like fighting Excalibur. So beware of the handle and the rust catcher on the bottom of the sheath, and you're good to go. At least for using it in Thailand, UT, NKP, Korat, etc.
I used to be a folder guy but as I've gotten older I've realized nothing beats a fixed blade. I carry an ontario rat 3 gobar for work then I have a rotation of fixed blades I carry outside of work. all my fixed blades ride in my pocket with an ulticlip
Love the falkkniven f1 had 2 so far but my choice is 4 to 5 inch d2 or the full carbons . But iv used huge 10 inch blades I love my case Bowie but small is more usable and comfortable
I think the best survival knife is one that has a 1095 Cro Van blade with a Saber Grind. Folders, oh no, not for me. I like serrated edges; they are great for making feather sticks.
You couldve just said KaBar😂
@@jeremymoses7401 Yup 👍👍
I love my bk9
Ive carried a Western Skinner since i was in the service as a survival knine but a good folder daily since we vouldnt carry fixed blades on the job
Bush cat is back. The only reason I kept watching. She is a show stealer. My personal knife is the Lars Falt casstrom knife
I agree no serrated edge blades!!!
I have a CS Survivalist for about €90,-- Now, I really like the looks of Esee6 a lot, but they cost more than 2 times the price, about €210,-- over here.
Sincere question :
Is the Esee6 really 2 times 'better'? Stronger? Tougher? Stays sharp longer? Or are there better options for that kind of money?
Thanks in advance to all responders!
Greets from the Netherlands 🇳🇱,
TW.
Not sure about 2x better but the ESEE knives are great! Pretty much bomb proof. And if you should ever break it, they will replace it.
@@SurvivalDispatch : okay! Thanks, appreciate it a lot 👍
I use the leather-man wave with a metal sheath I think is kinda cool but looking for a more fixed blade classic look I guess am trying to say my wave in a metal sheath looks so utilitarian
Hell I thought I was the only one who lost pocket clip knives, my EDC is a whiskey bent trapper like your case.
I have a bunch of esse knives in various sizes. A few of them gerber strongarms as well. Solid knives and pretty affordable.
i carrry the buck 110 and sometimes my multi tool too but i cant find a good leather or any pocket sized pouch to carry both. Awesome video
The Tom Brown Tracker is fool proof on carving feathersticks out of ANYTHING but it’s not a capable fighting knife like the Tops SXB by EJ Snyder…
The Esse Juglas looks like a really good balance between a nimble defense tool and a capable chopper…
The Ontario Marine Raider Bowie is discontinued because douche bags wanna buy cheap Chinese steel gimmicks….
The Channel Joe X is undisputable about showcasing the most durable blades….
Cold Steel SR-1 is a really good affordable small folder….
Mineral Mountain Hatchet Works and Work Tuff Gear make extremely tuff blades….
Cold Steel and K Bar are ok but I trust Tops more but they’re expensive.
…. If I know anything, you need a full tang chopper like the Juglas and something to featherstick unless you’re good enough to do fine work with a huge blade…
I personally think The Tom Brown Tracker is the best for it’s size. It has both a huge sabre and a finer grind in one tool with a functional notching saw and it’s indestructible… it just doesn’t have a hand guard for defense
It’s funny you and a lot of guys praise the Glock knife. It’s standard issued for danish military and I can tell you we do break alot of them.. I can tell you haven’t dig alot of trenches with this knife, cos you would know that the saw on the back of the knife is so bad as the old Rambo knifes… sorry I love your channel but Glock knifes shouldn’t be on any list for survival it’s a fighting knife not a general purpose knife for outdoor
@@Wolf-viking And it was designed the first time as a bayonet on a military rifle and as second function is the hand of a soldier.
I sell bear knives and core. Great value and they have great quality.
Thx for review and opinion. Your design looks fantastic but over my wallet 😊 any other full fix with similar blade and max up to 70 bucks? Thx.
the USAF Survival will stay sharp. the saw is to cut A/C metal skin.
You get what you pay for, if you’re cheap you get a cheap steal and or sheath. If you’re real go mid range money wise. Or go up in cost and get the best steal and sheath.
Have you tried Joker knives? The Bushlord with a scandi in Sleipner steel with curly birch handle scales is amazing. Under $150 on Amazon.
I purchased the on one knife, great knife. Handle and blade size are great
Awesome Video 📹 always great information to help you in knife 🔪 selecting. 😊
16,58 love that design!!!
I feel the same way ! Excellent content
Love that cat!
Bush Kitty 🐈 is such a drama queen 👑 😆.... Those newer Swiss tech Stahlern don't break the bank, easy to sharpen and doesn't lose it's edge easy. If you lose it or break it then it's not hard to replace wnd the contour and edge profile isn't bad. Other than that I used a gerber prodigy straight edge. You could open the side of a battle ship 😂
Unless you know how to use it, even the best knife in the world is useless. Mors Kochanski and Ray Mears could be given a Mora 511 and they would run circles around the average “survivalist” in the woods. Besides, most survival situations happen when you’re least prepared for them. Survival sucks. Most folks are simply prepared for inconvenient camping situations.
Tooche.!
Man, that's a good cat!
If I have to grab one knife heading out the door for survival it would be the Gerber Strongarm. Hard to break the blade, I can sharpen it. What can you do with a broken blade? Ounce for ounce, dollar for dollar the fake Strongarms off Temu or AliExpress are the best knife. IMO $10 - $15 for an near indestructible knife. I don't have any knives over $100 so can't say but for now it's the Strongarm. Not perfect but tough.
The Case Knives 2cnd blade is great to get the peanut butter in the bottom of the jar...
Ontario Rat 1 and Rat 2 in D2 steel is all I need forever.
Thanks for the content 👍🏻👍🏻
jfyi, the "ontario" you have there, is a very cheap copy of the real thing. The serration is also not meant to be used for sawing through anything else than thin air-plane aluminium.
Definitely not my favorite choice. Thanks.
@@SurvivalDispatch All good. Different strokes and all. I've been happy with it, for over 30 years now .)
Where did you get the brown “pull the dot” strap?! I want some
One of the best vids on the subject ive seen in like 15 years 👍
Wow! Thanks!!
I live in Rhode Island and I can't carry anything over 3 inches long according to the laws I'd love to carry my kabar fixed blade but it is 7 inches long
what do you think of the reiff f6 in magnacut for a survival knife?
I think the Gerber LMF and Auto 06 make a great pair.
I carry a Victorinox Explorer Swiss Army Knife for EDC but slip joint knives are dangerous unless, like me, you are used to them and careful not to fold them onto your fingers. Though I might be caught with only this little multi-bladed knife, it is NOT a survival knife !
Survival knives should be suitable for fighting off people and animals, general bushcrafting, game processing, fishing, food preparation and emergency medicine. Good possibilities include : Esee 5 ( 1/4 " thick and designed for helicopter pilot survival), Kukris by Cold Steel and KaBar, Old Air Force Pilot knives by Onterio and others ( attached sharpening stone on sheath, bolt pommel for hammering but needs shapening to be sharp ), British MOD Survival Knife ( 1/4" thick and rugged but needs sharpening out of the box), Glock Field Knife, Tops SXB and SXS , Woodman's Pal, Mil. KaBar.
The key features to consider are : an easy to draw sheath, versatility, ruggedness, blade length of at least 5", hand guard or resistance to sliding hand up blade, use in type of wilderness you will be hiking through and added features you might want ( Think TOPS SXB, SXS---- and Tracker knives by various makers).
Carry a belt-pack survival kit and forget about gimmicks like attached junk on sheaths and hollow handles.
I have a folder that I carry with me twice a day when I walk my dog, it not an expensive knife but it opens very easily one handed, it locks open nice and tight and I can clip it on the waistband or pocket of anything I’m wearing walking around a suburban area surrounded by forest,mountains and trails. It’s concealable as not to scare any of my soft neighbors but big and strong enough to take care of anything I might encounter close to home. When I go in the bush I always carry a fixed blade though. And when I’m in the city I have a light duty Benchmade bugout in my waist or pocket or a razor sharp Civivi. So small concealable folder around people and a solid fixed blade for the wild and a larger sturdy folder for my suburbs.
I hate when people say the best knife is the one you have on you. Yes we know that even with guns but this helps make a choice to GO AND BUY A KNIFE FIRST so you can actually carry it and use it.
I have the same diamond stone..use it for all my knives too.
I never liked a pocket knife when carried all the time they tend to wear a hole in my pocket.
I carry my folding knife in a holder on my belt
137 people tuned out after “…when I got my skinny jeans on.”
They make my butt look good!
I bought a tom brown tracker years ago and thought cause it's Tom Brown it's good but it seemed over built and almost useless.looks cool but the knife sux. I bought a bk 9 and that was better. I do have a mora, condor kephart, bk 19, and 7 that I like. I think that the Tom Brown tracker is gimmicky. What's surprising is it has Tom Brown on it.
When is tge on three going to be back in stock?
the best survival knife is the one you can afford and will use!
The concept of a "survival knife" is crippled in any way. You don't usually plan on surviving, but when you do, you normally take a big chunky "survival knife" with you. But after that, you will not carry it on you all the time, and then, suddenly, you could be in a survival situation. "But hey, now I don't have my survival knife!"
I find after all my years of training from boyscouts to ranger school and a few other schools in the military.
If i get into a survival situation something went seriously wrong.
Most situation that would be uncomfortable can be avoided with basic common sense and listening to that little voice.
The number one saying back in Bat.
"Proper planning prevents piss poor performance "
Expect the worst to achieve the best
Anything that can go wrong will go wrong and always at the worst time.
They are saying to remind you always plan never quit.
Whoever butchered that Buck 110 should be flogged. Obviously, their daddy always bought them new toys when they broke their old ones. That knife's condition shows a complete lack of respect for an iconic American knife. Shame!
It's always the old timers that take bench grinders to their knives. Lol they are the worst about it.
I love 1095cv both of my kabar fixed blades 1211 and the bk9
1095, 3.5 blade, 3.5 handle, full tang, 3/16-1/4 thick, scandinavian,exposed pommel, 90 spine. sculpted handle.
Hey how ya go about getting the scandi edc you came up with.?
Bear Forest Knives
I’ve lost too many knives because of the clip.. They just grab the vines in the woods.. A good sheath is just as important as the blade.. The main thing for me is the experience that comes with using all of them over the years and understanding how to overcome the deficiency of the tool (whichever one you have) when you need it.. I certainly favor a good full tang fixed blade these days though.. As far as that goes, I find you get what you pay for the majority of the time.. Other than writing a book here, I’m a knife whore 😂
If a folder is all i have going into a wooded area ill usually go inside the waistband with my belt over the pocket clip. Either appendix or 3 o'clock depending on where I've got my T-rex.
Long live the YUKON !! Great video as always!
To quote Alan Kay “if you will do. It will do”
Also how and where is he at
if you get the RIGHT multitool, with the right blades, it beats ALL belt knives to hell. Get a Leatherman Crunch, and toss out the SS serrated knife blade, the Phillips blade and the SS file. Replace the knife blade with one made out of an Old Hickory paring-knife. Add two real -deal Nicholson files, , one a 3 sided file the other a flat file. Alter the tool to be taken-apart and reassembled with no other tools. Grind the end of the vise grip jaws to a needle nosed configuration. Alter the small flathead blade to be an awl, needle and twin edged drill blade. Alter the medium flathead to be a scoop knife and a chisel. Alter the end of the 3 sided file to be a gouge. The vise grip holds one of my 3 different saw blades. A knife is just a knife. It can't do even 1/4 of the things that the modified Crunch can do.
I cant stand a serrated knife. I prefer anything high carbon steel and full tang.
steel matters don’t know how you can make a choice on a knife not knowing the steel because blade maintenance matters is it stainless will it rust do i need a daimond field sharpener etc.
and serrations stay sharp longer and that gerbers like ten bucks
Use a tack rag made from cloth with a little BreakFree CLP to keep your knife oiled to prevent rust in the field. Store the tack rag in a heavy duty Zip-Loc bag. ( Eezox" actually edged out BreakFree in a test ).
Glock knives and survival are so far away from both like surviving just by singing funny songs.
You need a dlt white river ursus 45 3v
thoughts on the Ka-Bar ?
I once broke a Ka-bar while doing normal work. I don’t trust them.
Gonna have to be more specific on "KaBar". If you mean the USMC fighting knife, then yes it has a rat tail tang and its not gonna take the abuse you think it will. But, KaBar is a brand, and i can tell you some of the bk models are pretty stout.
Awesome video see you on the next one
My favrit knife is my Tbar i haed it kustm made for me from iron wolf😊😊
Nice hat!
Check that cap out….Timay!!!
Money Changes Everything
She said, I'm sorry, baby, I'm leaving you tonight
I found someone new, he's waitin' in the car outside
Song by Cyndi Lauper
Good vidio Jason
Love your on3 knife