History of the MK1 kukri khukuri

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2023

Комментарии • 10

  • @glenh4971
    @glenh4971 Год назад

    Good job. There is good information on the old kukri's on the Heritage kukri site. With photo's.

  • @davidmoreau2703
    @davidmoreau2703 Месяц назад

    Qui elle est entreprise qui fabrique ses magnifiques Khukuri

  • @ashokns7817
    @ashokns7817 11 месяцев назад

    I need one

    • @ShelleyRaskin
      @ShelleyRaskin  11 месяцев назад +1

      Beware it’s not light, designed for heavy use.

  • @turtlewolfpack6061
    @turtlewolfpack6061 Год назад

    The cho (is that the right word?) looks like a nipple wrench to me.

    • @ShelleyRaskin
      @ShelleyRaskin  Год назад +1

      Kind of does, supposed to be like the symbol for the British crown.
      Has some hardening tests on it, but I suspect they are fake given the cost of Rockwell testers

    • @turtlewolfpack6061
      @turtlewolfpack6061 Год назад

      @@ShelleyRaskin most use files that give a rough idea of what the HRC is, I haven't personally seen them but evidently you can get specific HRC files. Most of the hardness testers we have in my industry don't even measure HRC.

    • @ShelleyRaskin
      @ShelleyRaskin  Год назад +2

      @@turtlewolfpack6061 you can buy specific rock well testing files, they tell you roughly what you are at i.e

    • @ShelleyRaskin
      @ShelleyRaskin  Год назад +2

      If it scratches with 65 scale it must be below that, grab the 60 check, grab the 55 check, you get a rough idea but not an exact reading, a Rockwell tester pushes a ball bearing into the steel and measure the depth it goes, a small ball bearing, leaves a small indentation on the metal, you should do a couple of tests to get an average.
      They are big, heavy and slightly delicate machines.
      I can’t afford one.
      The files are a lot cheaper, but only tell you roughly where you are at.

    • @turtlewolfpack6061
      @turtlewolfpack6061 Год назад +1

      @@ShelleyRaskin I know what a hardness tester is, been using them for over 25 years, just our machines aren't scaled in HRC.