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#31378 - 09/02/04 06:07 PM Gransfors Bruks Mini Hatchet
Anonymous
Unregistered


I just purchased a GB mini and am totally amazed at the quality and usefulness of this tool.

Are there any opinions as to how it may rate as a survival tool?

tj


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#31379 - 09/02/04 09:45 PM Re: Gransfors Bruks Mini Hatchet
Chris Kavanaugh Offline
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
Wetterling axes are one of the best axes available, and in fact actually outperform their more expensive competitor Granfors Bruk in many ways. That said, an axe is an extremely dangerous tool, even with the experienced user. The shorter the handle, the closer to your body parts, which is your mini hatchet. Buy Mors Kochanski's BUSHCRAFT for excellent instruction on use and safety. You should buy a full field battle dressing for quick emergency application if an accident should occur and learn to keep it sharp. Lots of outdoorsmen and survivors manage quite well without any axe, or even a large chopping blade, which are promoted as some manner of do it all knife and axe. If you are in an arboreal setting for an extended period, then they are a definite plus.

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#31380 - 09/02/04 10:12 PM Re: Gransfors Bruks Mini Hatchet
GoatRider Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 08/28/04
Posts: 835
Loc: Maple Grove, MN
I was taught never to "swing" a hatchet. To split a log, you hold the blade against the wood, and hold on to the base of the hatchet and the log together. Then bash the log against a stump. The momentum of the head will drive it into the log much more accurately and safely. This hatchet looks very well suited to that- notice how the blade is aligned with the foot of the handle. Perfect.
_________________________
- Benton

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#31381 - 09/03/04 08:54 AM Re: Gransfors Bruks Mini Hatchet
dave750gixer Offline
journeyman

Registered: 03/17/04
Posts: 60
Loc: UK
You can make do without an axe if you have a good knife but I find some tasks to be easier with the "correct" tool and therefore use less expended energy in a survival situation. The biggest difference I have found in tasks is in cutting a slash through bark in order to set up a drain for sap. Much easier with an axe when the diameter of the trunk increases. Becomes very difficult on a large tree with a knife. Although maybe my technique is just poor. I own one of those hatchets and although a bit small for my purposes they are fine as I'm not going to be felling any large trees. I also bought one for my girlfriend. She finds its the first hatchet she has ever considered carrying since the weight penalty for an axe was always too much for her.

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#31382 - 09/06/04 10:50 PM Re: Gransfors Bruks Mini Hatchet
Anonymous
Unregistered


>>I just purchased a GB mini and am totally amazed at the quality and usefulness of this tool.

Are there any opinions as to how it may rate as a survival tool?<<

I've become quite partial to mine. All of the cautions are worthwhile, I guess (though past generations of Boy Scouts are sniggering at us), and it's certainly worth taking the time to become very familiar with it's use.

If I think there's a fair chance that I might need to use a hatchet, I'll take the Gransfors Wildlife instead... but, like my PSK and Palm (Pilot), the Mini is useful for the very reason that it's light enough to have with me when I DON'T expect to need it.. say, for a hike in a state park where I'd better have a pretty convincing reason to even consider chopping something.

For those who have not actually held one, I should warn you that most people's first reaction to the Mini is "what's this toy?". It is very tiny indeed, and you usually need to work with one a bit to prove to yourself that it works at all.

Here in the too-PC-for-words East, I find that I get MUCH less negative reaction from somebody spotting this tiny hatchet than I would from a large (or even just a not-tiny) knife, even though the Mini would be far from useless as a weapon if it came to that. Carrying the Mini, I find I'm comfortable carrying a smaller knife than I would be otherwise, in the same circumstances, and that all works out very well here.

If you get used to using it like an ulu, it can be very versatile indeed for chopping or even slicing tasks. The shape of the blade and handle is very conducive to "choking up" on it for fine work- something not true of some other designs.

Some argue for the even lighter weight of folding aluminum saws, and it's true that they can cut through a branch faster and easier for less weight... but, as a survival tool, a saw is MUCH less versatile.

I also have one of the harder-to-find Vaughn Sub-Zero hatchets that's about the same size, and even lighter, but the handle is just so thin on that one that I don't have the faith in it that I do the Mini.

In short, there are certainly a lot better tools to have if you know you're going to be chopping wood... but the Mini is light enough to forget on your belt, and a universe better than not having one at all.


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