Cut up a bear a couple days ago. During the process, my Havalon blade popped off probably 4 or 5 times and then the blade finally broke. I have a baricuta and my wife has the piranta. I put a brand new baricuta blade on and started cutting the hide for a rug. At some point I got her piranta out and started using that. It was crazy to me how much sharper her piranta blade was than the baricuta. Dunno why - both brand new blades. Anyway the piranta blade was the one popping off. I was using the barricuta for cutting the joints and the heavy duty work. At one point the piranta gave way and the knife jammed into my other arm's wrist. Thank God the blade popped off and didn't break in have with a sharp portion still attached to the handle, or I would have slit my wrist 7 miles away from the truck. Freaks me out. Thinking it might be time to ditch the Havalon knives.
For you guys that use the other light weight knives, how many animals can you get out of them before they need sharpening?
I'm not the best at keeping the traditional knives I have for butchering and filleting sharp so as it is, so the appeal of throwing a new blade on is high. Also, if I shoot an animal one day, and want to hunt with my wife or whatever the next, I'm not going to have time or energy to play with sharpening between trips.
How are Randy Newberg's new knives for interchangble blades? Any better than the havalons? Or should I just go back to a traditional knife? Or many just be more careful with the havalons, but it's hard to do sometimes when you need to get a job done.
Havalons are dangerous, I have used some version of them the last 8-10yrs as a primary knife, currently using a tyto. Of all of those years cutting up a pile of critters, I rarely take another knife out of my pack, I like using them.
the past couple years I have been trying different fixed blades, I have a bunch... I’m a knife junky, but when it comes to it, my little fragile scalpel blade knives do the heavy lifting.
realizing how dangerous they are potentially, I have been looking for that “real knife” that will do the job.
the truth is, I have not found a knife that makes it through a whole elk without getting more dull than I like... even the benchmade altitude with its s90v blade gets dull breaking an elk down, and what I don’t like about it is that it’s hard to field sharpen.
My best compromise I have found is a Dalstrong shogun series paring knife, it’s the best blade steel I have used for breaking critters down in the woods... holds an edge really well but it’s easy to get back to really sharp.
I will never be without a flimsy blade replaceable blade knife, I like them, but I am trying to turn it into a secondary tool rather than primary, and that’s only because I think a real knife is safer to use.
the benchmade altitude is the perfect knife in theory, but that has not translated to real life, it gets dull before the first elk is cut up with it, and you need a fairly substantial sharpening system to bring it back to effortlessly popping hair... I may be odd man out, but I don’t think the really hard super steels are good for hunting knives
I want a knife that holds a good edge but also easy to field sharpen.
I don’t mind sharpening my knives, I actually enjoy it, but I don’t like doing it standing over a half cut up elk by myself with a bunch of work to do