And then this is where things get entertaining. My buddy has been watching that TV show Forged in Fire lately and wanted to try some of the blade tests out for himself. We all have a bit of gear that claims to be “heavy duty” and “hard-use” and thought it would be fun to see what some of this can actually stand up to. Here’s just a sample of what was brought out:
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A variety of things were used as testing material, for example:
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First up was this “railroad knife” he bought from a guy on-line, supposedly made out of railroad track. Custom job and it was a beefy chopper. Edge retention? Not so much.
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This Gerber LMF II on the other hand help up amazingly well through all “testing”. Typically it’s six hard swings against the object.
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The surprising discovery of the day was the Harbor Freight $7 machete. It survived all the tests (bone chop, coconut, pork ribs, strap slicing, etc) with flying colors. It picked up a very slight bow to the blade but the edge was in great shape at the end of the day. The handle was the only issue as the screws loosened up a bit part way through the testing. Tightened them back up and was able to continue safely testing, but it still wasn’t 100%.
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RMJ Tomahawk versus pork ribs
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TODD W, on Flickr
Another custom Damascus blade from somewhere overseas, didn’t do too bad
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Not really super-scientific or definitive testing, but we did learn some things and had fun hanging out in the shop. Amazingly enough, no blood was spilled around so many sharp and pointy things being swung about.