PetrifiedWood
Well-Known Member
I offered up one of my BushPick knives for a pass-around on a bushcraft forum I'm a member of. One of the guys in the pass-around put it through it's paces today and it passed with flying colors! The only exception is that it suffered a chip in one of the dymondwood scales at the pommel, and after the testing it had dulled enough so that it did not shave anymore.
Anyhow, I got permission to re-post his pictures here.
Here you can see the split. I assume this is from batoning the knife on the pommel to drive the tip into the bamboo. In his own words, "not a big deal". It's a failure of the dymondwood itself, not my heat treat or construction methods. (Though I did ask the folks testing the knife not to baton on the handle.) I'm glad it made it through with as little damage as it did.
Here he actually uses a wooden mallet to baton the knife into some punk wood...
He said after all this it no longer shaves. But he will strop it.
Overall I am pleased with it's performance. It handled a severe beating and didn't chip, roll or snap. The handles stayed glued on, and it did well overall. Now it just has to make it past 3 more testers! :biggrin:
Anyhow, I got permission to re-post his pictures here.























Here you can see the split. I assume this is from batoning the knife on the pommel to drive the tip into the bamboo. In his own words, "not a big deal". It's a failure of the dymondwood itself, not my heat treat or construction methods. (Though I did ask the folks testing the knife not to baton on the handle.) I'm glad it made it through with as little damage as it did.
















Here he actually uses a wooden mallet to baton the knife into some punk wood...








He said after all this it no longer shaves. But he will strop it.
Overall I am pleased with it's performance. It handled a severe beating and didn't chip, roll or snap. The handles stayed glued on, and it did well overall. Now it just has to make it past 3 more testers! :biggrin: