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SOFMED
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Aug 10, 2018
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I am an active duty Green Beret and can tell you honestly that the term “tactical” should only apply to fixed blades. I carry 2 knives when in kit. One is a pocket folder and the other is a fixed blade mounted discretely on my plate carrier. The pocket folder is used for general tasks like opening MREs, cutting cordage, etc. The fixed blade is for use when firearms aren‘t an option. “Tactical” is marketing and nothing else. A sharpened butter knife would be more useful to me in a “tactical” situation than a Reeves Sebenza. But I still carry a Sebenza in my pocket and it gets more use than my fixed blade. There are characteristics that are better suited to “tactical” situations though. Long enough to reach vital organs, corosion resistant, strong but not overbuilt, strong retention in sheath/holster, quickly deployable, double edged, has enough grip to fill your hand, handle material that resists environmental deterioration, subdued in color.
Aug 10, 2018
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