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#42904 - 07/03/05 04:52 AM Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
Anonymous
Unregistered


What, in your opinion is the most practical knife or multi-function tool for camping, hiking, hunting, backpacking, fishing, etc? Please leave a link so everyone can see it.

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#42905 - 07/03/05 06:23 AM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
Anonymous
Unregistered


Congratulations. You have opened the ultimate outdoors person can of worms.

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#42906 - 07/03/05 06:47 AM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
lazermonkey Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: 12/27/04
Posts: 318
Loc: Monterey CA
dido! Anything you like, is comfortable, and will not fail when you need it. Hope I wasn't to veg.
_________________________
Hmmm... I think it is time for a bigger hammer.

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#42907 - 07/03/05 04:26 PM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
X-ray Dave Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/11/03
Posts: 572
Loc: Nevada
The SAK vs. Multi Tool has been covered, you could try searching for the thread. Depends on what you think you will need the tool to do. It's what works for you, there's no perfect answer that fits everyone. My EDC is a SAK Ranger and a Leatherman kf-4. EDC also change with enviroment and activities.
Dave

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#42908 - 07/03/05 04:42 PM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
TeacherRO Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 03/11/05
Posts: 2574
The best tool is the one you have with you; therefore get the one you'll carry...:)

tro

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#42909 - 07/03/05 08:14 PM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
Paul810 Offline
Veteran

Registered: 03/02/03
Posts: 1428
Loc: NJ, USA
Any of the major brand ones are pretty good (Leatherman, Gerber, Sog, ect) as well as Victorinox multi-tool and swiss army knives. You just have to pick which one fits you best.
You have to make sure that you carry it as often as possible and learn to use it.


Edited by Paul810 (07/03/05 08:31 PM)

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#42910 - 07/03/05 09:29 PM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
pipedreams Offline
Newbie

Registered: 07/11/04
Posts: 32
Loc: OK




Leatherman Charge XTi, Victorinox Swiss Army Knife(take your pick), Chris Reeve Knives Lg. Classic Sebenza.

todd
_________________________
-------------------------------------------------
Every moment is an adventure. Are you equipped?

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#42911 - 07/03/05 09:59 PM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
m9key Offline
Member

Registered: 05/28/03
Posts: 143
Loc: florida
here's my 2 cents i concur with what you are comfortable with..... leatherman charge xti with nylon pouch the little pocket in front of the big one seems to fit a micra or the gerber as well along with the charge behind it w/out any difference

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#42912 - 07/04/05 12:55 AM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
KenK Offline
"Be Prepared"
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 06/26/04
Posts: 2211
Loc: NE Wisconsin
I'm one of those people who think that each of the activities listed deserves its own tool, and there are knives that do those functions better than others.

CAMPING: I tend to like fixed blade knives that are good slicers and excel at food preparation and can also be used in preparing kindling and other simple chores. I've been using the Becker BK10 for this, though it is a bit beefy for a good slicer.

HIKING: I tend to prefer a lightweight folder worn in a sheath on my belt. My favorite is the Rittergrip here.

HUNTING: I haven't hunted in a looong time - mostly in my teenage years with my buddie who lived on a farm. At that time I preferred a fixed blade that was VERY sharp and had a sweeping curved blade that facilitated skinning. Back then I used a Buck Special 119.

BACKPACKING: I haven't backpacked since my days in Boy Scouts, but from what I've read, the preferred knives are all small and relativley lightweight. These inlcude small SAKs or Leathermen like the Micra or Squirt.

FISHING: I see two different primary uses for knives related to fishing. One is what I think of as general cleaning of fish. For this I prefer a smallish fixed blade knife so it doesn't get too gunked up. Beyond that, just about any blade will do for scaling and head-choping. Now, if you choose to do filleting (I never do) then certainly a thin fixed bladed fillet knife is certainly called for.

Will one knife do all this? Well, the knife that comes to mind is one of the Mora knifes. They are light enough to carry while hiking & maybe backpacking, good enough slicers for camping, and probably could do a half-decent job filleting a fish. I have the Model 22, but I'd rather not use an oil-sealed wooden handled knife for butchering game or cleaning fish. Models 731 or 741 (carbon or stainless) from http://www.ragweedforge.com seem like they'd do well. For my taste (the other plastic handled Moras on the site are a bit too short for food preparation and fish cleaning.

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#42913 - 07/04/05 01:31 AM Re: Most practical knife or multi-function tool?
Hutch4545 Offline
dedicated member

Registered: 04/08/04
Posts: 104
Hi and welcome to the forum.

I think you'll find that everyone has his or her own preferences. A wealth of information can be found here on the ETS main site.

My two cents:

- Chris Reeve Sebenza
- Victorinox SwissTool
- Leatherman S4



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