@@kalma5003 It's kept from the italian "roncola" ( www.iltamtam.it/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/roncola.gif ). It has two uses. First, it prevent the handle to slip out of the hand even if you use a very low grip (useful for chopping), second, it protects the little finger from impacts (again, useful when chopping)
ArkadiBolschek I'm such a moron, now everything is clear, might as well get one of these then we never know when we might get in a street fight with a tank. Thanks.
The price is kinda iffy for me but the real killer is that gaudy b.s of a company logo splattered across the entire length of the blade. Look you're already charging highway robbery for the blade, maybe cool it off on the logo and people might be more willing to buy it. Seriously why do companies feel the need to plaster their products with that kinda of b.s?
@@lordkandar I think advertising is better placed on cheap products. If you're selling a well-made item for good money, a logo will only detract from quality. At least, I think it does.
Dang, one hell of a knife. Definitley something to consider if somebody seeks a good one for trekking/survival (or, you know, just another cool piece for their collection). The price is a big high, sure, but considering the undebatable quality not unjustified. Awesome.
I like the disassembility (a word I just made up) I think it's great to be able to take your knife apart for customization and cleaning and wish it was more common among fixed blades.
Hi Skall, just wondering If you find yourself in a survival situation (natural disaster, war, apocalypse etc.) would you take this knife? or would you take other knives? If so, which one?
Best to have 2 or more knives in a survival situation. If I was in one i would take a Cold Steel Gurkha Kukri and a Mora knife for precision work like carving.
Take a real hatchet and a long fillet/chef's knife. Why screw with overpriced half-ass combo knives that do both jobs badly when the real things are lightweight, easy to carry, and cheap? Gimme $30 & 30 minutes in Walmart and I'll get a razor-sharp titanium 3-knife cook set w/sheaths that will finely process foods & fibers, a light hatchet that outchops any knife & will crush skulls, plus scissors, a sharpening stone, and gloves to wear while using them all. "Survival" knives are codpieces.
@@passonthestar3689 well the reason I say combat knife, is because of how that spine is shaped, it's narrow, and with that grind it really looks like a knife designed for stabbing something very effectively and not getting stuck
I have to agree with TheStraycat74 here, Skall. My best and favorite knife is my KaBar. I have the KaBar BK-9 aka the Becker Comat Bowie by BK&T of Olean, NY. It has a 9" blade of 1095 high carbon steel, has a near full blade flat grind, composite handle, full profile tang and has remained shaving sharp through a lot of rough use. I've had it a few years now and just strop it in between uses to maintain the edge. The baked on black coating is tough s nails. Mine was right around $100 USD at a local surplus store. We still have our beloved Grandpa Joe's Marine KaBar from when he served as a Navajo Code Talker in WWII. It's still shaving sharp after over 70 years of abuse. KaBar still proudly makes that same knife today in stacked leather and modern composite handles. KaBar rules!!! PS: I did enjoy the video and like the knife you showed. I just think it's over-priced at nearly $400 USD. ruclips.net/video/Ss6vgkaLtfs/видео.html www.kabar.com/products/BK9 (Don't pay retail. You can get it on Amazon for about $110.00 USD)
I've owned a Ka-Bar for over a decade and have used it for EVERYTHING including batoning and it's still the best knife I have ever owned. heck, it's 10 times better than the knives I MAKE.
Hi skall, Just wanted to thank you for this kind of videos. I'm not even remotely interested in buying this kind of knife, i have an opinel for 95% of the time i need one and a big old antique from my grandfather for the rest. I'm just interested in the design and the technical reasons behind each features, and you have a natural talent to explain things clearly and get your message across. Same with your videos on techniques. Keep it up and thanks again !
I like the innovations. Truth is how skilled you are with your tools, more so than the tool choice. Such is consumerism, its easier to pick a great knife than be great with a knife.
Hmm, regarding the "Tank" knife, I only consider the Fulcrum from Extrema Ratio really satisfy that definition. A very straight forward and extremely strong tanto tip blade, and the military version is double edged at the tip(sharpened swedge). The design is so successful, that they made it into a rifle bayonet.The bayonet version in particular was copied by many other European countries. Till today I consider Fulcrum to be Extrema Ratio's flagship product.
Ycan also get buck knives for under $100 , not sure about price in Europe though... & they have pros & cons, more on the hunting side than a "go cut down a tree with my knife as i spent to much to buy a hatchet".
But why an allen key to remove the tang stud? Wouldn't it be better to have a flat head or Phillips head so you can remove or tighten it with anything?
This knife is very similar to Gerber BMF, not Ka-Bar. Batoning is scout practice, no one needs it to survive. As for use with an ferro rod, just use the Dremel in a little piece of the spine or take any piece of steel along with the ferro rod.
Skal, no coating will hold up to use and abuse, especially when chopping dried out, hard wood, throwing and banging the knife against stones. The wear doesn't look exaggerated by any means.
This knife is a re make of the Gerber BMF- "Basic Multi Function" hence the "Advanced" designation. Gerber made several iterations of the BMF, with blades ranging from 7 to close to 9 inches. Some of the 7 inch models could be had with chisel saw teeth. The Gerber had a DuPont Hypalon handle that is very comfortable and surprisingly durable as it feels like a very dense foam. The sheath was similar to the ER's but included a pouch for a Silva compass that came with the knife as well as a diamond sharpener on the back of the sheath. The BMF was made to compete in the post Rambo knife world.
I carry a saburo survival buck knife and a black ronin tomahawk ("throwing ax"). thoughts? I chose the black ronin so I can make a makeshift full size ax, or easily just carry a "hatchet." the saburo was a gift but I have a hook and line stored in the haft. compass is shit.
I appreciate your videos! I'm looking to buy an extrema ratio knife and am using your videos to help me decide. It's between the AMF, Doberman and the KS Kukri. If you could only have one, as a do all type of camp knife, which one would you pick?
I like their knives, I don't own any, but they seem quite good, still: I'll buy something a little cheaper, maybe the German Military Knife, the Kampfmesser (engl: Fighting Knife) 3000 without serrations (don't need them and they are a pain in the ass to re-sharpen!)
A sabre grind is a kind of flat grind. flat is a category, sabre is a subcategory. A sabre grind is any flat grind between a full flat and a scandi in edge bevel.
No, there are plenty of high end stainless steels. They wouldn't be suitable for very long blades like swords (too brittle) but for knives they are excellent.
If you had to choose just one blade to carry for survival and possibly combat, what would it be? Bowie Kukri Tanto sawback machete (assuming similar weight for all of them) If it´s another type of blade, why? Rationally, I´d chose the tanto as IMHO it gives the best compromise, but I do really like kukris as they chop amazingly well and for combat a Bowie would be probably the best.
edi Personally I would choose the khukuri, but the knives you listed are generally not similar in weight. An average khukuri will weigh twice a Bowie or tanto (which is a pretty vague category)
edi I would prefer the khukuri because it is the most effective for its size at chopping tasks. The Bowie doesn't have enough weight forward to be efficient, I wouldn't choose the tanto (assuming you mean an American style tanto) because belly is useful on a multi-purpose knife. Both the Bowie and khukuri have a history of effective use in combat so on that front either would work, I'm sure the tanto would as well.
@@deathbyastonishment7930 IMHO the Kukri is far better as a tool than a weapon. It's quite an overkill, but not very good in fencing. I agree with you on the bowie. It actually surprises me that such fine pointed blades were so tremendously successful when they were mostly used out of combat. By tanto I mean a blade with little tapering (both distal and profile) with essentially a sabre grind and a sturdy yet very pointy tip (with no false edge, although some historic examples do have it)
It certainly looks like a refinement of the old Gerber BMF, that's something that extrema ratio constantly does, take and old but proven design and make a modern version, like the. E.R. commando witch is clearly inspired by the Fairbairn-sykes.
Yeah this is not a knife you want to do bushcraft with, the pommel really retricts you with options on how to hold your knife. Very impractical for various woodcutting jobs. Not liking the grind either, i really prefer a convex grind, is a bit more complex but much nicer overall. K-Bar isnt a good survival/bushcraft knife either. For that pricetag i would have liked a kydex sheath honestly. You should get a Bark River knife.
I have a question about your other videos...how do you grab the blade without cutting yourself? Let's say you being attacked by a heavy weapon and have no choice but to block. Sometimes I see you grab the blade with the left hand also to block heavy attacks....Now in a real battle I'm always wondering how that would work bc I believe you would cut your own hand doing that......I know I'm missing something here lol, probably sound dumb to but could someone answer this?
I have this weird soft spot for Extrema Ratio knives even though they are tactical/combat oriented. I am way more likely to need a knife for outdoorsy stuff or opening packages than stabbing opponents. I will say that the one Extrema Ratio folder I have is top shelf and super cool but is a heinous bitch to sharpen.
Anyone else notice the hatred for extrema ratio. Whenever I see RUclips videos on these knives its one of 2 types. Its ugly. Or its expensive. Skallagrim himself is the king of the "you get what you pay for" term. Calm down guys we can have expensive knives if they are worth the price
Ive heard a few horror stories about their blades snapping in half and they werent to happy about honouring the warranty in fact the dude broke the same knife twice and hand to pay half price first time and just never bothered with a third think is was a bowie style survival knife same steel in all their knives i like some of the designs .the requiem.col moschin
If they meant it to be multi function why'd they round off the edges of the back edge of the knife? You can't fire steel very well with the back of the blade that way.
I prefer my Bark River in 3v for 230 and the some extra money on a nicer sheath, camping equipment, and food for that price. Hell, a full custom knife, a new backpacking, or some boots. I was interested in Extrema Ratio knives until I saw the price and materials. I'll spend a decent amount of money on my nice and equipment but IMHO, it's not worth it unless you're a collector. Especially a knife that expensive not coming with a good sheath.
@@cvbpo cool, thanks for the reply, I've just always thought it's better to have it bendy instead of brittle or like a katana that's a bit of both, just getting into blades, I'm in the uk though the laws around knifes are horrendous here.
@@TheGreg6466 i heard that the laws there was but i blade that was temper right well stay hard to keep an edge but soften up to were it wont break on impact and use...and having a blade that was had the back solf only and the edge keep harden the edge is more prone to chiping and if the hole blade did bend the edge may crack as well....but blades like that are not bad at all
I like that little half guard by the pommel
Hopefully it can be twisted off.
it's a stop meant to keep the knife from slipping out the hand
What do you like it for? For the looks, or does it have any practical use?
@@kalma5003 looks loke it coud open a bottle
@@kalma5003 It's kept from the italian "roncola" ( www.iltamtam.it/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/roncola.gif ). It has two uses. First, it prevent the handle to slip out of the hand even if you use a very low grip (useful for chopping), second, it protects the little finger from impacts (again, useful when chopping)
I don't think it's accurate, Skall...I don't see any cannons in this "Tank Knife"
Obviously it's a knife 'for' tanks. For when you have to fight a tank hand-to-hand.
ArkadiBolschek I'm such a moron, now everything is clear, might as well get one of these then we never know when we might get in a street fight with a tank. Thanks.
@@Palatinus-Z Now you know. And knowing is half the battle.
(The other half is having a tank knife at the ready!) :D
That's because it attaches to the tank barrel ^^
bconneau Good thinking, tanks also get in street fight with tanks.
The price is kinda iffy for me but the real killer is that gaudy b.s of a company logo splattered across the entire length of the blade. Look you're already charging highway robbery for the blade, maybe cool it off on the logo and people might be more willing to buy it.
Seriously why do companies feel the need to plaster their products with that kinda of b.s?
The reason why is advertising. It definitely is gaudy but a lot of people are used to it.
You could have a knife handmade to your exact specification for that kind of money.
@@lordkandar I think advertising is better placed on cheap products. If you're selling a well-made item for good money, a logo will only detract from quality. At least, I think it does.
BILTEMA
I had no idea there were so many distinctions and categories for knives and swords, till I started watching your channel.
Dang, one hell of a knife. Definitley something to consider if somebody seeks a good one for trekking/survival (or, you know, just another cool piece for their collection). The price is a big high, sure, but considering the undebatable quality not unjustified. Awesome.
I like the disassembility (a word I just made up) I think it's great to be able to take your knife apart for customization and cleaning and wish it was more common among fixed blades.
*Obligatory pommel joke since I have noticed a decrease in this meme and I do not want it to disappear forever*
There's literally two pommel jokes under this comment...
@@Orcus__ I noticed. Good to see
hushhhhh....just let it happen.
Cheesy Child
I give you like for the pfp and the concern for the lack of pommel memes
Pommels never die
Hi Skall, just wondering If you find yourself in a survival situation (natural disaster, war, apocalypse etc.) would you take this knife? or would you take other knives? If so, which one?
Best to have 2 or more knives in a survival situation. If I was in one i would take a Cold Steel Gurkha Kukri and a Mora knife for precision work like carving.
I would take my karambit and ice pick perfect for bushcraft stuff!! 👍
@Zack Ceasar how much heavier than good enough?
Take a real hatchet and a long fillet/chef's knife. Why screw with overpriced half-ass combo knives that do both jobs badly when the real things are lightweight, easy to carry, and cheap? Gimme $30 & 30 minutes in Walmart and I'll get a razor-sharp titanium 3-knife cook set w/sheaths that will finely process foods & fibers, a light hatchet that outchops any knife & will crush skulls, plus scissors, a sharpening stone, and gloves to wear while using them all. "Survival" knives are codpieces.
@@animistchannel2983 what are you gonna do with a kitchen knife
Does it have a removable pommel?
It does, very nice
Just ordered several.
It literally does
Indeed it does
It looks more like a combat knife than a survival knife imo
In a way quite a number of tantos would be better survival blades despite being meant as combat weapons
I mean there's not too much of a difference tbh
Very 80s jungle survival knife
@@passonthestar3689 well the reason I say combat knife, is because of how that spine is shaped, it's narrow, and with that grind it really looks like a knife designed for stabbing something very effectively and not getting stuck
Plus it looks cheap in my opinion.
I have to agree with TheStraycat74 here, Skall. My best and favorite knife is my KaBar. I have the KaBar BK-9 aka the Becker Comat Bowie by BK&T of Olean, NY. It has a 9" blade of 1095 high carbon steel, has a near full blade flat grind, composite handle, full profile tang and has remained shaving sharp through a lot of rough use. I've had it a few years now and just strop it in between uses to maintain the edge. The baked on black coating is tough s nails. Mine was right around $100 USD at a local surplus store. We still have our beloved Grandpa Joe's Marine KaBar from when he served as a Navajo Code Talker in WWII. It's still shaving sharp after over 70 years of abuse. KaBar still proudly makes that same knife today in stacked leather and modern composite handles. KaBar rules!!! PS: I did enjoy the video and like the knife you showed. I just think it's over-priced at nearly $400 USD.
ruclips.net/video/Ss6vgkaLtfs/видео.html
www.kabar.com/products/BK9 (Don't pay retail. You can get it on Amazon for about $110.00 USD)
$380 USD for ONE, but I can buy 5 Ka-Bar's for that price... I'll pass thank you.
Yeah, it's a really steep price.
I would spend it on a KABAR BK7 over the KABAR USMC anyday.
@Imperator it works. Just don't beat it through a tree or something. Axes exist for a reason.
I've owned a Ka-Bar for over a decade and have used it for EVERYTHING including batoning and it's still the best knife I have ever owned. heck, it's 10 times better than the knives I MAKE.
@Minute Writer trees included? What about all those tests videos and horror stories of kabars bending stuff
Hi skall,
Just wanted to thank you for this kind of videos. I'm not even remotely interested in buying this kind of knife, i have an opinel for 95% of the time i need one and a big old antique from my grandfather for the rest.
I'm just interested in the design and the technical reasons behind each features, and you have a natural talent to explain things clearly and get your message across. Same with your videos on techniques. Keep it up and thanks again !
I like the innovations. Truth is how skilled you are with your tools, more so than the tool choice. Such is consumerism, its easier to pick a great knife than be great with a knife.
Hmm, regarding the "Tank" knife, I only consider the Fulcrum from Extrema Ratio really satisfy that definition. A very straight forward and extremely strong tanto tip blade, and the military version is double edged at the tip(sharpened swedge). The design is so successful, that they made it into a rifle bayonet.The bayonet version in particular was copied by many other European countries. Till today I consider Fulcrum to be Extrema Ratio's flagship product.
Ooo a stabby stabby
Please, not all are experts around here.
Refrain from using the scientific terms, if you might.
A stabbo sticko
@@Orinslayer A-again. Those scientific terms...
Can you do a knife review more in the €50-€100 range? I would love a good survival knife, but €350,- is just way out of my budget.
menno graafmans I would love to see some dedicated combat knives for self defense reviewed.
Just buy one of Kabar's becker knives.
The Hudson Bay knife is like 50usd and that's a pretty good survival knife
It doesn't have any fancy features but it's a giant knife so that's good
Try Mora's or a Kabar BK2 or 7
Ycan also get buck knives for under $100 , not sure about price in Europe though... & they have pros & cons, more on the hunting side than a "go cut down a tree with my knife as i spent to much to buy a hatchet".
Agree with you on the lettering size. Makes it look like a truck stop knife.
But why an allen key to remove the tang stud? Wouldn't it be better to have a flat head or Phillips head so you can remove or tighten it with anything?
The jewel of my nation, Italy :-)
Have you ever put a standard Ka-Bar through your tests? I know hundreds of people have, just curious if you have.
But how am I supposed to fight Swiss pikemen with such a short knife?
You can throw it... or mount it on a stick! Or if you are a rogue, use stealth and get a sneak attack bonus... ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
throw the pommel, might take out a whole block of pikemen.
You get close to them one , pretend to be friendly and go assasin style, or you cut poisenois berries in ther food when no one is looking.
This knife is very similar to Gerber BMF, not Ka-Bar.
Batoning is scout practice, no one needs it to survive.
As for use with an ferro rod, just use the Dremel in a little piece of the spine or take any piece of steel along with the ferro rod.
Skal, no coating will hold up to use and abuse, especially when chopping dried out, hard wood, throwing and banging the knife against stones. The wear doesn't look exaggerated by any means.
Yeah. I've yet to see a coating that survives the impact with a stone.
To my mind this is a fighting knife and broadly similar knives can be found at army surplus outlets at far less cost
Good God! For that price I expect no flaws and a lot more on my knife than what's offered here.
Have you done a video on the Fairbairns-Sykes flighting knife issues to the SOE during WWII?
Batoning that post, board, plank, whatever, you certainly ended it rightly. Happy New Year to you and yours.
Ok...so...new knife for the collection...thanx, Skall!
This knife is a re make of the Gerber BMF- "Basic Multi Function" hence the "Advanced" designation. Gerber made several iterations of the BMF, with blades ranging from 7 to close to 9 inches. Some of the 7 inch models could be had with chisel saw teeth. The Gerber had a DuPont Hypalon handle that is very comfortable and surprisingly durable as it feels like a very dense foam. The sheath was similar to the ER's but included a pouch for a Silva compass that came with the knife as well as a diamond sharpener on the back of the sheath. The BMF was made to compete in the post Rambo knife world.
One of its "Advanced Multi Functions" is advertising... Could they not fit a bit more billboarding on that thing?
The review was really helpful in showing what you should check in a multi function knife.Can you do more reviews but on more affordable knives?
Glock FM 78 is also a good one (especially for the price -about 40 "bucks") after some modifying....
Imagine cutting food with that shit.
Most badass chef alive
I carry a saburo survival buck knife and a black ronin tomahawk ("throwing ax"). thoughts?
I chose the black ronin so I can make a makeshift full size ax, or easily just carry a "hatchet."
the saburo was a gift but I have a hook and line stored in the haft. compass is shit.
You could baton the end of a long stick and then take the handle and fittings off and put the tang in the split. Tie it
I appreciate your videos! I'm looking to buy an extrema ratio knife and am using your videos to help me decide. It's between the AMF, Doberman and the KS Kukri. If you could only have one, as a do all type of camp knife, which one would you pick?
Don't get the doberman! Huge issues with the thickness behind the edge. They know their knives break chip. Don't get the dobermann iv
I like their knives, I don't own any, but they seem quite good, still: I'll buy something a little cheaper, maybe the German Military Knife, the Kampfmesser (engl: Fighting Knife) 3000 without serrations (don't need them and they are a pain in the ass to re-sharpen!)
What's with the step-down in the grip? That looks like it would be uncomfortable.
I'm really digging this knife
11:07 you can do a lot with the tip ;p
Was searching for that comment :D
Oh, you.
ive had no complaints from the missus yet
Hey Skall did you ever review cold steels GI Tanto? I have one and it's a pretty good blade
The large writing on the blade struck me as a bit odd, too. Are knives becoming the fashion accessories that hand bags are for women?
A sabre grind is a kind of flat grind. flat is a category, sabre is a subcategory. A sabre grind is any flat grind between a full flat and a scandi in edge bevel.
The stainless steel isn't a negative (or at a minimum not preferable)? Still learning here, so appreciate any response.
No, there are plenty of high end stainless steels. They wouldn't be suitable for very long blades like swords (too brittle) but for knives they are excellent.
@@SkallagrimGood to know. Thanks!
Excellent review. Including the more bushcraft stuff should sit well. Nice work.
When you do a review can you try the knife to the point of seriously damaging it? And can you keep it afterward or you have to send it back?
If you had to choose just one blade to carry for survival and possibly combat, what would it be?
Bowie
Kukri
Tanto
sawback machete
(assuming similar weight for all of them)
If it´s another type of blade, why?
Rationally, I´d chose the tanto as IMHO it gives the best compromise, but I do really like kukris as they chop amazingly well and for combat a Bowie would be probably the best.
edi Personally I would choose the khukuri, but the knives you listed are generally not similar in weight. An average khukuri will weigh twice a Bowie or tanto (which is a pretty vague category)
@@deathbyastonishment7930 I meant a small kukri (they can vary a lot in size) and a rather large blade of the other type.
@@deathbyastonishment7930 Why would you prefer the Kukri?
edi I would prefer the khukuri because it is the most effective for its size at chopping tasks. The Bowie doesn't have enough weight forward to be efficient, I wouldn't choose the tanto (assuming you mean an American style tanto) because belly is useful on a multi-purpose knife.
Both the Bowie and khukuri have a history of effective use in combat so on that front either would work, I'm sure the tanto would as well.
@@deathbyastonishment7930 IMHO the Kukri is far better as a tool than a weapon. It's quite an overkill, but not very good in fencing. I agree with you on the bowie. It actually surprises me that such fine pointed blades were so tremendously successful when they were mostly used out of combat. By tanto I mean a blade with little tapering (both distal and profile) with essentially a sabre grind and a sturdy yet very pointy tip (with no false edge, although some historic examples do have it)
There was another knife that looked almost identical to that... I believe by Gerber. Maybe 15 or 20 years back
It certainly looks like a refinement of the old Gerber BMF, that's something that extrema ratio constantly does, take and old but proven design and make a modern version, like the. E.R. commando witch is clearly inspired by the Fairbairn-sykes.
Will temperature effect ballistic gel characteristics?
Also if you read my comment what temp you do testing in? is it consistent?
*_Try using the guard bits to get sparks_*
Yeah this is not a knife you want to do bushcraft with, the pommel really retricts you with options on how to hold your knife. Very impractical for various woodcutting jobs. Not liking the grind either, i really prefer a convex grind, is a bit more complex but much nicer overall. K-Bar isnt a good survival/bushcraft knife either. For that pricetag i would have liked a kydex sheath honestly. You should get a Bark River knife.
Remaining in Italy, if you can find it, you should try Olivetto knives
Have you looked at the kabar grass machete yet? Every time I swing mine I feel like I'm swinging an awesome short sword.
I have a question about your other videos...how do you grab the blade without cutting yourself? Let's say you being attacked by a heavy weapon and have no choice but to block. Sometimes I see you grab the blade with the left hand also to block heavy attacks....Now in a real battle I'm always wondering how that would work bc I believe you would cut your own hand doing that......I know I'm missing something here lol, probably sound dumb to but could someone answer this?
He made a video with the title "Why grabbing a sharp blade isn't always crazy" or so.
You can use a pice of rock or a striker that comes with rod a smooth spine is way better for extended use
Yeeeeahs, Reviews!!!!
Hi Skall, Have you done a review of the Terävä Skrama knife ?
Hey Skall,
can you have a look at one of those overhyped Tirpitz knives? :)
With the removable grip I can see aftermarket grips being popular
Would like to hear your opinion on the msk-1 survival knife
Looks almost too good to be true
11:05 ,,You can do a lot with that tip'' 😂😂😂
Extrema Ratio makes some good ass knives.
Skallagrim could you do a knifebox review ive been wanting to know if k should get it like is it quality
I have this weird soft spot for Extrema Ratio knives even though they are tactical/combat oriented. I am way more likely to need a knife for outdoorsy stuff or opening packages than stabbing opponents.
I will say that the one Extrema Ratio folder I have is top shelf and super cool but is a heinous bitch to sharpen.
Hey, I know it may be a lot to ask, but can can you review the Rakuyo (a sword from Bloodborne)
With N960, they shoulda just skipped the coating to lower the price, lol.
use the corner of the guard/back of blade to strike for firesteel
question: what is the multi-purpose here? it stabs and cuts and you can baton it to split wood, so it's a knoife, what else?
can you review the Fulcrum?
Anyone else notice the hatred for extrema ratio. Whenever I see RUclips videos on these knives its one of 2 types. Its ugly. Or its expensive. Skallagrim himself is the king of the "you get what you pay for" term. Calm down guys we can have expensive knives if they are worth the price
Can you do a review of the double bladed sword fighting style like you did a couple years ago with the reversed grip fighting style
Ive heard a few horror stories about their blades snapping in half and they werent to happy about honouring the warranty in fact the dude broke the same knife twice and hand to pay half price first time and just never bothered with a third think is was a bowie style survival knife same steel in all their knives i like some of the designs .the requiem.col moschin
Make a video talking about if spinning around in a circle with a sword like garren is pratical
hmmmm, the knife looks like the grandson of the Gerber BMF
Exactly what I was thinking!
any Plans of testing the fulcrum?
So... you can end tanks rightly?
What happened to your right hand? Looks a little bit like you tried hand vs. zombie-head with it finding out that the Hand looses...
I'd like to see you review Survival Lilly's knife.
Could you review Survival Lilly's APO-1 Survival K.N.I.F.E.?
What is a TANK KNIFE, never heard the term before
For a $600.00 (CDN) it better be indestructible and amazing.
You should get someone to make you a knife for testing. As in a fine English hunting or camping knife.
Reminds me of the Gerber BMF
If they meant it to be multi function why'd they round off the edges of the back edge of the knife? You can't fire steel very well with the back of the blade that way.
Damn skall! I was looking into this knife!
To come back to the Grievous question from yesterday's stream, I think a lightsaber pike would be the best choice in this situation
she: just the tip!
Skall: *smiles* you can do a lot with that tip
That billboarding is intense smh
But does it have wifi?
if I ever get one, I'm going to use paracord and a mini survival kit to turn the 2 part guard into a D guard
Nice knife indeed.
Woo! Knife review!
The stuff on the knife bothers me I'd prefer a nice black finish over the writing on there
If I ever needed a knife to make it through the apocalypse, this'll be it.
I prefer my Bark River in 3v for 230 and the some extra money on a nicer sheath, camping equipment, and food for that price.
Hell, a full custom knife, a new backpacking, or some boots.
I was interested in Extrema Ratio knives until I saw the price and materials. I'll spend a decent amount of money on my nice and equipment but IMHO, it's not worth it unless you're a collector. Especially a knife that expensive not coming with a good sheath.
Skallagrim do a video about the mighty cape on Knights.... or is it just a fantasy thing???????
No pommel, no emergency nuke
Edit there is a removable pommel, there is officially nothing the knife can't do.
I don't like that lower-guard. Although it makes for a better grip, it takes up too much space and makes the silouett look less elegant
is it very brittle such hard steel? high risk of snapping the blade with a bit of abuse?
not if the tempering job was good
@@cvbpo cool, thanks for the reply, I've just always thought it's better to have it bendy instead of brittle or like a katana that's a bit of both, just getting into blades, I'm in the uk though the laws around knifes are horrendous here.
@@TheGreg6466 i heard that the laws there was but i blade that was temper right well stay hard to keep an edge but soften up to were it wont break on impact and use...and having a blade that was had the back solf only and the edge keep harden the edge is more prone to chiping and if the hole blade did bend the edge may crack as well....but blades like that are not bad at all