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reswright
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Apr 19, 2019
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A tactical knife is one that can be deployed fast, is made and designed with sufficient material strength to live up to significant abuse without coming out of tolerance, won 't accidentally cut off your fingers, and has a form factor suitable for combat. In most cases these preconditions means that the blade is fixed or is an automatic out-the-front, but for people who live with knife laws and still want something 'tactical' (most of whom are lucky enough that they are unlikely to experience firsthand combat, and it is their tastes, researched through questions like this, which determine what gets sold in the larger market, much more than the exigencies of personal combat) they're probably looking at getting a folding knife to meet their 'tactical' needs. Because people aren't making temporary shelters and striking sparks for cookfires with their 'tactical' folders (if you are doing those things you're probably in a situation where you can have a fixed blade out) your reasons for having a 'tactical' knife boil down to the chance that you might need it in personal combat. So the knife needs to be drawn from the pocket and unfolded for personal combat, which will start at fairly close range with little warning, for a variety of factors. That means the blade is mirror sheen, not matte, not stonewashed, not anything else, because a flashing steel edge scares the piss out of people, and because there is no such thing as a knife fight, let alone a fair knife fight. If a knife's out someone's trying to kill someone else. that's only a 'fight' in popular entertainment. If you are unlucky enough to be in that situation, fear is your ally in close combat, much more than you are worried about fingerprints on your pretty pretty steel or someone seeing your steel glint from far away. You probably want to get everyone's attention anyway; something's happening that's bad enough that you're holding a lethal weapon in your hand. Feces and the fan have had their mutual introductions. Outside of the movies, that means you could use help, and cops, and onlookers, because the first object is to survive: again, it's not a fight. The knife needs to be rugged because you don't want it to fail in combat but more to the point if it's a tactical knife, you better be practicing with it. And on that note, if you make a 'tactical' folding knife but you don't make an equally weighted trainer knife for practicing, I gotta question whether you're some kinda tosser. Training knives save lives, mainly your own again and again, because they let you practice hard and what you need to do with a folding knife is practice drawing it from the pocket until it's something your medulla can handle all on its own, because you may be extremely *shook* by your real world encounter with lethal danger and even if you know how to use your adrenaline to your advantage, it's still a bad time to have to concentrate on your fine motor skills. So you better practice a lot, drill the muscle memory into form, until you can do it without thinking. So the trainer knife needs a pivot and lock and material that will live up to that relentless training abuse and still stay in tolerance with the feel and weighting of the actual knife. Look at Benchmade and Spyderco and Emerson (including the Wave karambits Fox makes and the Kershaw 6034 that also licenses the wave) for good examples of how to go about it. Don't look at anyone that provides a trainer punched out of aluminum. The trainer's got to have the same weight and as close to possible the same exact feel as the real knife. Two cents, keep the change
Apr 19, 2019
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