The one thing I would caution with big knives and chopping is hand fatigue. Most of us don't get to chop branches and wood with a large heavy knife on a consistent basis. After 30 to 40 chops, hand fatigue can set in and that's when accidents can happen. If you do a lot of chopping consistently you'll build up hand and arm strength but the weekend warrior should be careful. At work we only allow two handed machetes just for this reason.....a lot more control and less chance of a bad injury to the body. In a survival situation, even minor injuries can be fatal. Keep up the good content!!
I'm a knife aficionado or nerd. LOLO. I have a Becker BK 9 and I like the stock sheath so I did not upgrade. The pocket on the front i put in a ferro rod and striker. I attached a Mora companion. I clipped the sheath to the pocket and used paracord as a wrap at the bottom.. The two holes in the BK sheath at the bottom is used as a leg tie. The Becker sheath while it is nylon has a plastic inner guard for protecting from the knife edge. Nylon dries quickly it is quiet and light. To each their own but I just wanted to bring that out. For knives with no coating I use spray clear coat . It protects from rust ,stains etc. The coating of course comes off the edge when used. Good channel I enjoyed your outnlook.
For big knives , my go to is the Tops SXB because it’s versatile for Bushcrafting as well as features for self defense. I’d also like to get a Hablis Self Reliance Tool for strictly bushcraft duties. Every nook, cranny and curve in these two big blades have a useful purpose. I’ve carried that Camillus on my property for hacking down briars for a couple of years w no problems back in the day
A good demonstration, and a good subject. I bought a TOPS Firestrike 45 completely because of an advertisement for it. It showed a picture of the knife, dirty, held in a dirty hand, chopping a piece of wood about five inches in diameter. The caption said something like this: “You suddenly find yourself stranded. No food, no supplies, a hundred miles from the nearest road. But at least you have the knife that will save your life.” It was spot-on advertising. 👍🏼👍🏼 My favorite “survival” tool is the TOPS Armageddon. A couple of my favorite “one tool options” are my Bark River JBA Prototype, and my TOPS Tahoma Field Knife. The Condor Matagi is an excellent choice also.
My two cents for a big knife. 1. The Busse Battle Mistress 2. Philippine Bolo. Both of these large knives have been beaten to hell and back while keeping a razors edge (easily touched up) and continues to rock on
Good introduction. 1:46 "..has to be a FULL tang .. " OK, let's start there. Why? Strength? How many times do knives actually break between the beginning of the cutting edge and the pommel (ie the area where the tang is)? The chances are infinitesimally small! With a really thick blade (say 5/16ths or 8mm), even a less than full tang is NEVER going to break, not even under extreme conditions. Two of the prominent large knives (Cold Steel Trail Master and Falkniven Modern Bowie) employ "through tang" construction, where the tang goes all the way through, but edges not exposed; ie the tang is slightly narrower and enclosed in the molded handle material for the full length. No critic worth his/her salt is likely to consider these great knives to be "weak" because of its tang construction. 3:15 BK 9 - Great knife! Not really my style, as I don't like the very broad, blunt point design. This is, however, a personal preference issue, not necessarily a performance one, as many people find it great to work with. 4:08 Ontario SP53 Bolo - I don't really regard this as a knife as such. 5:16 Camillus Inject - Wow! Rambo knife on steroids. Seriously? 6:52 ESEE 6 - In my opinion the 6 is too small to be classed as a Large Knife, both in length (6 in vs 8 1/2 inch plus), and thickness (1/4 inch/6mm+). I would class it as the upper end of belt knife territory. Very good knife, but a bit miscategorised here, I think. I have a Cold Steel Trail Master (San Mai III version, hand made in Japan). The TM is superbly balanced, has a thick stock (5/16) and a fine tip. The handle is very grippy, even when very wet, or when using gloves. The blade is a full convex ground laminated steel with NO secondary bevel. Because of the design, blade tip speed is very high making slicing very easy. With all discussions about such knives, there is a point I'd like to raise. Wherever one might be, and have this kind of knife with you, I'd say that it should be standard procedure to be carrying a folding saw as well (say a Silky Gomboy, or even Bigboy). Failure to do this would, in my opinion, be tantamount to gross negligence. I will NEVER subscribe to the " ...if you only had one tool with you" school of thought. My answer is that, in that case, I would not be out there. In addition I would have other knives as well anyway - like a belt knife (say Victorinox Venture Pro + kit) and a multi-function knife (like a Victorinox Hercules or Ranger Grip 79). With such a combination one has multiple blades for a multitude of different tasks, with the result that one would have little need for sharpening, even on quite lengthy excursions. [The Venture Pro kit actually has a diamond sharpening kit built into the sheath system!] Thanks for the video. Cheers mate!
Best “survival” knife would be a Mora Classic 2, Kephart style knife, any Marbles knife manufactured/assembled between 1999 and 2001. A good large knife would be an Old Hickory Butcher Knife with a 10” blade or the Stromeng 9” Leuku .
I love my Tops SXB and my Work Tuff Gear Silvanus. Work Tuff Gear has some excellent heavy duty knives, I love them. I've also used Khukuris in the past, another great knife.
I highly recommend try condors new terrachete. I also love the kabar cutless machete. But really i find a 3-4in knife more important. I carry a folding saw so i don't really chop wood. TH-cam has a way of finding a solution to something that was never a problem. I love big knives just don't find much use. Unless its the skrama not much can compare to that price an quality.
Yep, a good four inch fixed blade, or even a good folding knife, and a small folding saw, and your good to go. I also carry a tomahawk, because it not only has an edge, but a hammer poll. Two tools in one. But if I had to choose one big knife, and I own many, I'd go with the Condor Moonshiner knife.
@@longrider42 I've looked at that knife for a long time. It's price is very good, Even now. The only reason I haven't bought one is the sheath. I'm lefthanded. Might have to buy one and make a kydex sheath. As much as I love leather. Kydex is better in every way. Just my opinion.
@@richardhenry1969 I'm right handed, and I wear it on my left hip. Feels better. As for the leather sheath, its top notch, easy to water proof. Quieter then Kydex, and unless you make a taco style Kydex sheath, I find them to be bulkier. I've tried a few Kydex Sheaths, and I do have one knife with a okay Kydex sheath, but boy is it hard to pull the knife out, and it makes one heck of a loud noise when putting the knife away. Plus, the Moonshiner is old school, so needs a leather sheath :) Take care and keep em sharp.
you mentioned modifying your bic lighter with a zip tie. definitely a good idea but the best thing you can do to your bic is pry off the child resistant shield around the spinning striker. makes em way easier to use, especially when your hands are cold. I also like to wrap mine in duct tape because that stuff is good for lots of things and you can light it up if you need to. burns really well
Or buy a Clipper, preferably 2 or 3 and no zip tie needed, refillable, the parts are interchangeable so if you have 3 you have to be very slack or unlucky not to be able to get one working from the three.
Condor Moonshiner, it is a bit blade heavy, but that's a good thing. But I also would carry a small fixed blade or folder with a 4 inch blade, and a Tomahawk, with a good hammer poll on it. Oh, and the Stanley folding pocket saw.
My favorite big knives are a couple of custom knives I had made for me. As for production, Junglas, El Chete, Kershaw Camp 10, several Condor machetes.
“I removed the coating” I do not like coated blades either. Liking my 5160 for its springiness on my RTAK 2. I have compared a lot of steels and large blades, a better steel is 3v in my opinion. 1095 has the coating because it rusts and I found it chips, rolls and dulls even on Essee or Tops higher end knives. I’d rather have less rust and not have to sharpen or repair my knife edges often.
Great knives. The Esee 6 is a must have. My 1st camping trip from Canada into the US back in the 1980s I carried a buck 124 and a Victorinox champ. Now I keep a Canadian military jump knife and a British MOD in my emergency kit.
the very best survival knife in the world ?... is the knife that you have with you !!! I can not make myself leave the house without a custom cold steel recon 1 in my pocket /also carry a sheeple knife ( tiny )! I have the Mtech 151 $20.00 ,2019 ( get 3 and don't worry about breaking ) /custom kydex sheathe( cost 2x more than the knife ) in my pack ( bug out get home ) been carrying a pack sense 1970s ,now it has a different name ! and a folding saw ( $10.00 from drug store camp section ( still sharp after many summers of grandkids learning)!
very nice presentation in comparison. If you watch a modern movie you'd be led to believe that 70% of the time you're using a survival knife to fight alligators and terrorists, 20% of the time you're using it to cut rope on traps you set up, and 10% of the time it's on your hip while you kiss the main femme fatale or deliver a monologue on the duality of man
The one thing I would caution with big knives and chopping is hand fatigue. Most of us don't get to chop branches and wood with a large heavy knife on a consistent basis. After 30 to 40 chops, hand fatigue can set in and that's when accidents can happen. If you do a lot of chopping consistently you'll build up hand and arm strength but the weekend warrior should be careful. At work we only allow two handed machetes just for this reason.....a lot more control and less chance of a bad injury to the body. In a survival situation, even minor injuries can be fatal.
Keep up the good content!!
id like to see the esee junglass in the comparison, that's my go to big blade
After all these years, the Junglas is still hard to beat!
I'm a knife aficionado or nerd. LOLO. I have a Becker BK 9 and I like the stock sheath so I did not upgrade. The pocket on the front i put in a ferro rod and striker. I attached a Mora companion. I clipped the sheath to the pocket and used paracord as a wrap at the bottom.. The two holes in the BK sheath at the bottom is used as a leg tie. The Becker sheath while it is nylon has a plastic inner guard for protecting from the knife edge. Nylon dries quickly it is quiet and light. To each their own but I just wanted to bring that out. For knives with no coating I use spray clear coat . It protects from rust ,stains etc. The coating of course comes off the edge when used. Good channel I enjoyed your outnlook.
For big knives , my go to is the Tops SXB because it’s versatile for Bushcrafting as well as features for self defense.
I’d also like to get a Hablis Self Reliance Tool for strictly bushcraft duties.
Every nook, cranny and curve in these two big blades have a useful purpose.
I’ve carried that Camillus on my property for hacking down briars for a couple of years w no problems back in the day
I love my SRT! Just took it out yesterday on a hike. If I could only have one it would be from Habilis
A good demonstration, and a good subject.
I bought a TOPS Firestrike 45 completely because of an advertisement for it.
It showed a picture of the knife, dirty, held in a dirty hand, chopping a piece of wood about five inches in diameter.
The caption said something like this: “You suddenly find yourself stranded. No food, no supplies, a hundred miles from the nearest road. But at least you have the knife that will save your life.”
It was spot-on advertising. 👍🏼👍🏼
My favorite “survival” tool is the TOPS Armageddon.
A couple of my favorite “one tool options” are my Bark River JBA Prototype, and my TOPS Tahoma Field Knife.
The Condor Matagi is an excellent choice also.
I think you may like the Kodiak as a large survival knife 👍
My two cents for a big knife.
1. The Busse Battle Mistress
2. Philippine Bolo.
Both of these large knives have been beaten to hell and back while keeping a razors edge (easily touched up) and continues to rock on
A jack of all trades master of none...Often better than the master of one.
Good introduction.
1:46 "..has to be a FULL tang .. " OK, let's start there. Why? Strength? How many times do knives actually break between the beginning of the cutting edge and the pommel (ie the area where the tang is)? The chances are infinitesimally small! With a really thick blade (say 5/16ths or 8mm), even a less than full tang is NEVER going to break, not even under extreme conditions. Two of the prominent large knives (Cold Steel Trail Master and Falkniven Modern Bowie) employ "through tang" construction, where the tang goes all the way through, but edges not exposed; ie the tang is slightly narrower and enclosed in the molded handle material for the full length. No critic worth his/her salt is likely to consider these great knives to be "weak" because of its tang construction. 3:15 BK 9 - Great knife! Not really my style, as I don't like the very broad, blunt point design. This is, however, a personal preference issue, not necessarily a performance one, as many people find it great to work with.
4:08 Ontario SP53 Bolo - I don't really regard this as a knife as such.
5:16 Camillus Inject - Wow! Rambo knife on steroids. Seriously?
6:52 ESEE 6 - In my opinion the 6 is too small to be classed as a Large Knife, both in length (6 in vs 8 1/2 inch plus), and thickness (1/4 inch/6mm+). I would class it as the upper end of belt knife territory. Very good knife, but a bit miscategorised here, I think.
I have a Cold Steel Trail Master (San Mai III version, hand made in Japan). The TM is superbly balanced, has a thick stock (5/16) and a fine tip. The handle is very grippy, even when very wet, or when using gloves. The blade is a full convex ground laminated steel with NO secondary bevel. Because of the design, blade tip speed is very high making slicing very easy.
With all discussions about such knives, there is a point I'd like to raise. Wherever one might be, and have this kind of knife with you, I'd say that it should be standard procedure to be carrying a folding saw as well (say a Silky Gomboy, or even Bigboy). Failure to do this would, in my opinion, be tantamount to gross negligence. I will NEVER subscribe to the " ...if you only had one tool with you" school of thought. My answer is that, in that case, I would not be out there.
In addition I would have other knives as well anyway - like a belt knife (say Victorinox Venture Pro + kit) and a multi-function knife (like a Victorinox Hercules or Ranger Grip 79). With such a combination one has multiple blades for a multitude of different tasks, with the result that one would have little need for sharpening, even on quite lengthy excursions. [The Venture Pro kit actually has a diamond sharpening kit built into the sheath system!]
Thanks for the video.
Cheers mate!
Best “survival” knife would be a Mora Classic 2, Kephart style knife, any Marbles knife manufactured/assembled between 1999 and 2001. A good large knife would be an Old Hickory Butcher Knife with a 10” blade or the Stromeng 9” Leuku .
🤦🏻♂️😂
Bark River Bravo 3, Bravo Crusader and the Bravo Machete my belt knife is the Bark River Aurora Scandi.
Am a blacksmith I made me a bushcraft/survival knife 14" in length blade is 11" 5160 carbon steel leafspring truck spring.
I love my Tops SXB and my Work Tuff Gear Silvanus. Work Tuff Gear has some excellent heavy duty knives, I love them. I've also used Khukuris in the past, another great knife.
in America it is called woodsmanship ! see Bradford Angier's : How To Stay Alive In The Woods ! good vid !
Nice knives, thanks for sharing, God bless !
For large I would choose BK9, BK4, and the Terava Skrama
I highly recommend try condors new terrachete. I also love the kabar cutless machete. But really i find a 3-4in knife more important. I carry a folding saw so i don't really chop wood.
TH-cam has a way of finding a solution to something that was never a problem.
I love big knives just don't find much use. Unless its the skrama not much can compare to that price an quality.
Yep, a good four inch fixed blade, or even a good folding knife, and a small folding saw, and your good to go. I also carry a tomahawk, because it not only has an edge, but a hammer poll. Two tools in one. But if I had to choose one big knife, and I own many, I'd go with the Condor Moonshiner knife.
@@longrider42 I've looked at that knife for a long time. It's price is very good, Even now.
The only reason I haven't bought one is the sheath. I'm lefthanded.
Might have to buy one and make a kydex sheath. As much as I love leather. Kydex is better in every way. Just my opinion.
@@richardhenry1969 I'm right handed, and I wear it on my left hip. Feels better. As for the leather sheath, its top notch, easy to water proof. Quieter then Kydex, and unless you make a taco style Kydex sheath, I find them to be bulkier. I've tried a few Kydex Sheaths, and I do have one knife with a okay Kydex sheath, but boy is it hard to pull the knife out, and it makes one heck of a loud noise when putting the knife away. Plus, the Moonshiner is old school, so needs a leather sheath :) Take care and keep em sharp.
@@longrider42 you as well friend
I got a Kershaw camp 10 , buck 119 , couple of Mora companion's and a Gerber bolo
I've beat the black coating off of my Kershaw camp 10 and it's still just as good as new. They're still for a good price too
you mentioned modifying your bic lighter with a zip tie. definitely a good idea but the best thing you can do to your bic is pry off the child resistant shield around the spinning striker. makes em way easier to use, especially when your hands are cold. I also like to wrap mine in duct tape because that stuff is good for lots of things and you can light it up if you need to. burns really well
Or buy a Clipper, preferably 2 or 3 and no zip tie needed, refillable, the parts are interchangeable so if you have 3 you have to be very slack or unlucky not to be able to get one working from the three.
Number one thing is STRENGTH!
Good stuff bro ✌️
Condor Moonshiner, it is a bit blade heavy, but that's a good thing. But I also would carry a small fixed blade or folder with a 4 inch blade, and a Tomahawk, with a good hammer poll on it. Oh, and the Stanley folding pocket saw.
My favorite big knives are a couple of custom knives I had made for me. As for production, Junglas, El Chete, Kershaw Camp 10, several Condor machetes.
Terrava Skrama 200.
Case closed.
Why do you strip off the coating? Should I? And how do I prevent rusting
I like the esee cm6, the handle fits in my small/medium sized hands. The 3 and 4 are awesome too. I got 2 4’s too.
“I removed the coating” I do not like coated blades either. Liking my 5160 for its springiness on my RTAK 2. I have compared a lot of steels and large blades, a better steel is 3v in my opinion. 1095 has the coating because it rusts and I found it chips, rolls and dulls even on Essee or Tops higher end knives. I’d rather have less rust and not have to sharpen or repair my knife edges often.
Great knives. The Esee 6 is a must have. My 1st camping trip from Canada into the US back in the 1980s I carried a buck 124 and a Victorinox champ. Now I keep a Canadian military jump knife and a British MOD in my emergency kit.
I've been almost buying that esee for 3 years. I'd remove the coating as well
My choice is the ESEE 6, I really like mine, good content
I like my Ontario rtak 11
the very best survival knife in the world ?... is the knife that you have with you !!!
I can not make myself leave the house without a custom cold steel recon 1 in my pocket /also carry a sheeple knife ( tiny )! I have the Mtech 151 $20.00 ,2019 ( get 3 and don't worry about breaking ) /custom kydex sheathe( cost 2x more than the knife ) in my pack ( bug out get home ) been carrying a pack sense 1970s ,now it has a different name ! and a folding saw ( $10.00 from drug store camp section ( still sharp after many summers of grandkids learning)!
very nice presentation in comparison. If you watch a modern movie you'd be led to believe that 70% of the time you're using a survival knife to fight alligators and terrorists, 20% of the time you're using it to cut rope on traps you set up, and 10% of the time it's on your hip while you kiss the main femme fatale or deliver a monologue on the duality of man
Marine raider Bowie
Mine:
ESEE Junglas
24" Tramontina machete
(GGK, Kailash, EGKH) 11-13" Khukuris
PS: if you‘re looking for an indestructible knife: Cold Steel American G.I. Tanto.
Kukri for me
ONTARIO RD7, ontario sp5, becker bk 9 mais est léger, rtak 2, machette kabar kukri, machette kabar cutlass ; kabar robuste grand. Ontario Kukri, couteau tout usage idéal pour marbre, .crkt mah chete .
I would prefer an Esse and a saw. Big knives are less safe and more weight.
as far as the Esee's just go with the esse 5 its more of a chopper
Have Esee 5
Hello, let's interact.
No