#7753 - 07/24/02 08:30 PM
Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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in an urban survival situation or assembling how would you get a knife for a survival kit? Razors buying cheapo knives and doing it your self are all i could think of? like wise what would you do in a wilderness survival situation? <br>Thanx
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#7754 - 07/24/02 09:26 PM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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Ken, In a wilderness situation a knife would be fabricated from the same materials people used before metallurgy; lithic, bone,shell and even bamboo. It takes a little more skill than just haphasardly bashing two rocks together to flake a lithic blade. A large bone smashed with a cobble however will produce very keen edges. A librarian of classic antiquity was slashed to death by a mob wielding shells. Fabricating these items can be learned via the various "primitive movement" advocates. See Doug's link to Wilderness Way magazine. Some archaeological texts will demonstrate knapping.
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#7755 - 07/25/02 01:17 AM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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I would start browsing through cutlery shops looking for a folding knife which:<br><br>*Has a blade length of just under 3 inches, thickness of .12 inches or better, of drop point or a strong clip point design, made from high carbon stainless steel such as ATS-34, SV30 or BG42. <br><br>*Has alloy slab handles with a framelock, a spring tension cam lock like the Axis lock, or a linerlock with particularly strong liners. <br><br>*Is of quality construction with a fair guarantee or warranty<br><br>*Is user serviceable with minimal or no tools <br><br>If you can afford to buy two of them.<br><br>A number of types fit this description, but if you've got the $, think "Sebenza."<br><br>With regard to an improvised knife, I would ask a correctional officer. <br>
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#7756 - 07/25/02 02:39 AM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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I'm not sure I'm reading you post correctly, but I will give it a shot. It appears to me that you are talking about a situation in which you cannot go the the store and buy one. I am an amateur blacksmith. Its sort of an extension of what I do professionally. At about 1400 degrees F (when it goes red) steel will become workable with a hammer. At 2850 F. it melts. That seems like a lot, but I have a small homeade forge that will hit 2850 F. with nothing but charcoal and a cheap hair dryer. Steel can be shaped, cut and sharpened with nothing but a hammer and a working surface. A piece of railroad track works wonders. <br>If you are interested in such things then the best book I have run across is called "Practical Blacksmithing and Metalworking" by Percy W. Blanford. It does not deal with history or artwork. Its a real hands on, "this is how you do it" type book.
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#7757 - 07/25/02 07:29 AM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Have you checked out Alex W. Bealer's "The Art of Blacksmithing"? The first edition of that got me started, and guided me through my first projects many years ago.<br><br>I set up a forge once with an old vacuum cleaner as a blower. It's counter-intuitive, but when I graduated to a rivet forge with a crank blower, and later to bellows, I found that I much preferred having more control over the draft than just on/off, and it saved fuel as well.<br><br>As much fun as this is, even if civilization gave up the fight tomorrow I imagine there would be plenty of factory-made knives around for many generations. Not sure I understand the question in the original post.
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#7758 - 07/25/02 12:39 PM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Yes, I have that book. <br> I have never learned to like a bellows. I have a small squirrel cage fan controlled by a rheostat/foot pedal.
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#7759 - 07/25/02 12:46 PM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Ah, then you've established fine control.<br><br>My experience is that bellows get much better as they get larger... but much of my forging was done in recreated colonial sites. Nobody else is likely to devote a few cowhides to a bellows of that size.
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#7760 - 07/25/02 01:24 PM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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As for "The Art of Blacksmithing", Im intrigued by the caltrops in the weapons chapter. <br>:)
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#7761 - 07/30/02 08:31 PM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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kf4ebp, if you are interested in caltrops and the like, check out the poor mans james bond 2. it was an excellent addition to my library.
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#7762 - 08/02/02 05:04 AM
Re: Survival Knife Making
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Here in Arizona you find lots of Quartz, everywhere. i was visiting my grandma, and i forgot my knife and she has 40 acres of nice desert property. so i took 2 large pieces of quartz and "bashed them together" and was rewarded with a fairly large arrow head shaped chunk of quartz. i chipped it down some more to get the "blade" thinner and i carved my self a walking stick. Would of been much easier to use a saw or something but hey why not.
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