Free: Contests & Raffles.
I guess what I carry into the field is a clip point.I know ...I know this is average guy stuff.This is what I carry as of today.https://www.amazon.com/Buck-Knives-Woodsman-Fixed-Blade/dp/B0001WAOF8/ref=m_pd_aw_sim_sccl_1/135-1528241-0480261?psc=1&pf_rd_p=748f3efb-3b72-4279-949b-d76063aaad16&pf_rd_r=3PSMS74QR8D3V4FR62W1&pd_rd_wg=kXtMn&pd_rd_w=zT1P9&content-id=amzn1.sym.748f3efb-3b72-4279-949b-d76063aaad16&pd_rd_r=936e6cab-cc4a-4033-abf5-c18ce93de1ba&pd_rd_i=B0001WAOF8&psc=1I've jabbed myself with that knife, the tip will poke ya. It's like the smallest,little mini 119 ,stab yourself,pile.But it does what it needs to as long as you keep your other hand out the way.
Quote from: Karl Blanchard on October 16, 2023, 07:06:08 PMWhatever a havalon blade is. That's the point I like I carry a havalon, especially when deer hunting. The only bad thing about the havalon is how weak the blades are....thus why I switched to the outdoor edge. Equally as sharp and a little more rigidity to the blade. Still love the Havalon!!! especially for skinning. I would say it is very close to a drop or straight point.
Whatever a havalon blade is. That's the point I like
Quote from: jrebel on October 16, 2023, 07:11:15 PMQuote from: Karl Blanchard on October 16, 2023, 07:06:08 PMWhatever a havalon blade is. That's the point I like I carry a havalon, especially when deer hunting. The only bad thing about the havalon is how weak the blades are....thus why I switched to the outdoor edge. Equally as sharp and a little more rigidity to the blade. Still love the Havalon!!! especially for skinning. I would say it is very close to a drop or straight point. Yea, this. The havalons are super great for a pocket knife, I have a few, great for cutting paracord when setting up camp, cleaning under your finger nails (careful, they are shop) but are too weak and fall short on a big game critter. I like a fixed blade drop point (I have a few) and like jreb mentioned, the OE replaceable blade knives…. My favorite combo. Edit: and those tiny havalon blades are way too small to skin off elk hide either doing boneless/gutless or even just quarters during warm weather, there’s a time crunch in those situations……
We will have to agree to disagree on that one sir as I've broken down no less than 50 elk with a havalon on we'll over a hundred deer. Sheep, mountain goats, etc. I honestly can't remember the last time I've broken a blade They are a cutting tool, not a pry bar. Treat them as such and there are no issues
If I ever got out from under the pile around here and went on forged in fire, my signature blade in my signature style would be the drop point. Of course, they'd make me build it 3x too big! A 3-4" cutting edge is ideal as a skinner/utility. Good steel makes the edge last, and good geometry and sharpening skills make it a pleasure to use. Won't be as sharp as a disposable, but it should still shave right off the stone, and cut absolutely effortlessly for an animal or two.
Quote from: WapitiTalk1 on October 16, 2023, 09:30:59 PMQuote from: jrebel on October 16, 2023, 07:11:15 PMQuote from: Karl Blanchard on October 16, 2023, 07:06:08 PMWhatever a havalon blade is. That's the point I like I carry a havalon, especially when deer hunting. The only bad thing about the havalon is how weak the blades are....thus why I switched to the outdoor edge. Equally as sharp and a little more rigidity to the blade. Still love the Havalon!!! especially for skinning. I would say it is very close to a drop or straight point. Yea, this. The havalons are super great for a pocket knife, I have a few, great for cutting paracord when setting up camp, cleaning under your finger nails (careful, they are shop) but are too weak and fall short on a big game critter. I like a fixed blade drop point (I have a few) and like jreb mentioned, the OE replaceable blade knives…. My favorite combo. Edit: and those tiny havalon blades are way too small to skin off elk hide either doing boneless/gutless or even just quarters during warm weather, there’s a time crunch in those situations…… We will have to agree to disagree on that one sir as I've broken down no less than 50 elk with a havalon on we'll over a hundred deer. Sheep, mountain goats, etc. I honestly can't remember the last time I've broken a blade They are a cutting tool, not a pry bar. Treat them as such and there are no issues