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Strider knives reviews
Strider knives reviews












strider knives reviews
  1. #Strider knives reviews full#
  2. #Strider knives reviews plus#

I do wish the handle was just a hair longer to fit my hand better but it’s girth is just about right. This makes the handle big enough to fill the hand but not be too bulky. It is a double wrap pattern that Bryan demonstrated on a previous “knot of the week” segment.

strider knives reviews

The knife is available with several different colors of cord wrapping including olive drab, black, and coyote like mine. I am also a big fan of the handle wrapped with 550 cord.

#Strider knives reviews plus#

Plus you cannot discount the CDI factor of tiger stripes. I have pretty much abused this knife and it still looks brand new. I am not entirely sure what this coating is made up of but it sure works good. Even the blades put out by Zero Tolerance that are a collaboration with Strider have this pattern. This tiger stripe pattern has become a de facto trademark of Strider blades. The blade also has a very attractive tiger stripe pattern that is hand applied to the blade.

strider knives reviews

I have actually used the butt of this knife to hammer in tent stakes and deal with errant nails sticking out where they should not be. The butt of the knife is squared off and with it’s width is well suited for occasional bashing. With the blade being this thick it is not a problem to use this knife for more than just a little light pry work. The blade on the very popular Benchmade Griptillian is even thinner. My EDC folder is a Spyderco Endura Wave and it has a fairly thick blade at only 1/8”, half that of the Strider. It’s 1/4” across except for where it tapers down for the point, compared to most knifes this is massive. One of the more impressive things about this knife if the width of the blade. It’s 7 3/4” of S30V steel with a 3 3/4” Americanized Tanto point blade as popularized by the late Bob Lum. Let’s start by taking a look at the knife itself. What could be more primitive than a sharpened hunk of steel with a piece of rope wrapped around it for a handle? Details It has cut anything I have put before it, and also pried and bashed it’s way through jobs no knife should be asked to do and come out no worse for the wear. It has proved itself to be exceptionally useful with it’s thick blade and sharp edge. This knife couldn’t be more simple, it is a solid piece of S30V steel with an edge, a point, and wrapped in 550 cord. One knife I own epitomizes all three of these aspects, my Strider WP tanto point. I’m not sure if it is their simplicity, or their all around general usefulness, or maybe it just appeals to the more primitive part of my brain. Mick’s entry, an incredible integral knife made out of ½” titanium stock with a zippered composite blade, gorgeous handles, and integral guard was the unanimous winner, and effectively retired the competition.Let me start off by saying I have a thing for knifes. At the 2002 Blade Show, a group of the best tactical knifemakers in the country decided to compete with each other to produce the most innovative and interesting fixed “battle blade” at the show.

strider knives reviews

Mick also worked on his technical skills, always striving to become better at the physical craft. It drew on the weapons carried by Roman legionnaires, yet was modern and usable in the 21stCentury battlefield. An example of this was the Ajax – it featured a very wide blade surface clearly designed to inflict damage. But constant in all of them was a disregard for convention, and a desire to try new ideas. His knife line grew over the following years to include different varieties of fixed blades, all distinctive and many with specialized uses. For instance, he was not the first to wrap a knife handle with paracord, but he was the first to do it in a way that was tough enough for sustained infantry use. Mick sampled some good ideas, but made them great. Soldiers, policemen, and other men going into harm’s way couldn’t buy them fast enough. No one carrying a Strider knife was going to be spotted because of sunlight glinting off of polished steel or a glossy leather sheath. These knives were the first indication of his innovative approach: in addition to their utilitarian design, the knives carried a subdued finish and subdued sheaths.

#Strider knives reviews full#

The knives he made didn’t look like the hunter-inspired knives seen in most PXs instead they were almost brutish in their functionality: beefy, solid, and with unbreakable ¼” stock full tangs. He started with a tabula rasa, a clean slate, informed only by his own experiences and knowledge of what a soldier needed in a knife. Mick’s approach was to not get burdened by the weight of past designs. This turned out to be fortunate turn of events, both for Mick and for the knife using world at large. In 1988, he began making specialized knives for use by the military.














Strider knives reviews