3-1/4 and it is. Starting some more this weekend.PM if you want one.Whats the blade length on the blade 2nd from the far right and is it spoken for?
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Nice! What steel you using? Also like the middle top one.Going to grind out a couple of Model #3 style knives this week. I'm anxious to see how they feel in hand.View attachment 826928
I’m using some 154 CM I have on hand. I have been enjoying some of the “older” steels lately. I feel people have forgotten that “dated” steels are still solid performers.Nice! What steel you using? Also like the middle top one.
100% agree. Ive made a bunch out of of simple carbon (farrier rasps)and never had anyone complain.I’m using some 154 CM I have on hand. I have been enjoying some of the “older” steels lately. I feel people have forgotten that “dated” steels are still solid performers
There is a reason many of these steels have stood the test of time. They simply work.100% agree. Ive made a bunch out of of simple carbon (farrier rasps)and never had anyone complain.
What is it? I need onePower is back on! And got some handles on today on several CBK versions . If you don’t have this clamp for drilling if you’re a knife maker …game changer.
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Pops sells them…Walter Sorrells design.What is it? I need one
Basically, yes.I have a couple questions to help understand the benefits of the CBK design. Over the last few months I've gone back down the rabbit hole with knives and settled on a Para 3 LW for EDC. The handle/blade geometry of that design has been a great improvement for every day, utility type cutting tasks. I was all set on using that knife (in 15V) for hunting as well. This thread got me thinking because the CBK handle/tip relationship is the opposite. Is is correct to say that the point of the tip being higher than the handle centerline is to distribute cutting across more of the blade? Meaning that while keeping the hand up away from the meat/animal/surface, the knife is more parallel to the cut and therefore uses more of the blade? As others mentioned above, I've noticed the curved portion of my current IW and Buck type blade shape knives taking 70% of the work and the straight portion nearer the handle doing very little.
You can teach yourself to use that part of the blade for some functions to save the rest of the blade for the main tasks but the CBK makes it easier to do. I mentioned it previously and I believe in this thread.the straight portion nearer the handle doing very little.