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I saw a 6"?/7"? Faieburne-Sykes knife with leather handle on amazon. That would be a cool toy. If you know how to use it, it could be more.

I wonder if that guy that taught the commandos (fairburn I assume?) has a book of his techniques online, that would be a cool skill to learn. @Andy54Hawken probably knows if such a book exists. I have no clue. The knife keeps coming up in the medieval weapons YouTube guy who reviews old weapons as a comparison. That's what made me think of it.

Here's the YouTube guy talking about stilettos. He mentions the Fairbairn-Sykes knife numerous times.
View: https://youtu.be/UxSxRuXAoEQ?si=CnXf40LUWGB_5jMb
Get Tough and Shooting To Live are two excellent books by William E. Fairbaim.

We were taught some knife fighting techniques at various schools I went to when in the Army..
It is an interesting skill and mindset to have.

Pictured below is a Gold Rush era knife which is very similar to the Sykes - Fairbaim knife
Andy
 
A quality knife will outlast you. If it has plastic anywhere its not a quality knife.
No plastic on the one I have, all steel skeletonized frame.

IMG_20260226_172146131.jpg
 
I can't justify spending too much for an edc knife that might get broken or lost. I typically go with a spring assist Kershaw. I feel they are a good value and seem to last quite a while for me. I can't actually recall ever wearing one out. I usually lose them first, or give them away, lol. Last one was a victim of the river. I forgot it after cleaning some salmon, and it was gone when I went back to grab it. I did find my stringer that I left in the same spot though! Haha.
 
I have no problem with plastic knife scales. Civivi G-10 plus carbon fiber D2, and g10 D2 hollow grind. Light and durable. Plus you can dye them. Both green knives shown I later dyed blue (also shown).





 
Looking to get a edc knife. What are you guys rocking? Benchmade Spiderco???
I went with the standard, but with a couple of twists. I bought the Customizable 110 Buck Folding - Hunter Knife with the best steel they had and finished it with a Quick Draw Holster for the Famous Buck 110 folding hunter by Mountain Mike. He originally designed in 1970's and the knife is horizontal with your belt ( hidden) and deploys instantly, blade open in your hand. The knife steel holds a razor edge with little maintenance.
 
I wonder if that guy that taught the commandos (fairburn I assume?) has a book of his techniques online, that would be a cool skill to learn.
Ask, and you shall receive!

 
Get Tough and Shooting To Live are two excellent books by William E. Fairbaim.

We were taught some knife fighting techniques at various schools I went to when in the Army..
It is an interesting skill and mindset to have.

Pictured below is a Gold Rush era knife which is very similar to the Sykes - Fairbaim knife
Andy
What in the tactical butter knife...
 
I had been unaware that OR considered assisted opening knives to be illegal when concealed. I hate carrying with the pocket clip visible - I always scrape my knuckles, and I don't want to advertise.

I just picked up a $15 Opinel. No one can accuse me of being quick on the draw now!
 
It doesn't matter what I carry.
It's the one you're gonna use when you borrow it.



Seems like nobody carries a knife.
But everybody needs one.
 
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