I have one of these and it is a fantastic knife it is soooo light you barely feel like it's there around your neck.
TALONZ Ceramic Neck/EDC Knives designed by Jim Eriksen from Dallas, Tx
REVIEWS AND FEEDBACK HAS BEEN GREAT ON THE TALONZ!! GET 'EM HERE OR AT BLADE SHOW TABLE 26M!
Introducing the TALONZ line of ceramic blade neck/EDC knives designed by knifemaker Jim Eriksen from Dallas, Texas, manufactured by Eagle. TALONZ blades are made of advanced Zirconium Oxide (ZrO) and are a marvel of modern materials science. The result is a blade that is second to hardness only to natural diamond. This extreme hardness means the knife will retain its original sharpness for years of normal use without the need for sharpening. TALONZ knives received an "Excellent" rating from CATRA for edge retention. (Cutlery & Allied Trades Research Assoc. in the United Kingdom)
Jim Eriksen has been making knives full-time for over 30 years and is a voting member of the Knifemaker's Guild. He is a protege of G.W. Stone, one of the founding Guild members. Jim is considered one of the best blade grinders in the country. He makes everything from art-knives to hard use working/tactical knives being used by professionals all around the world.
There are two blade styles of TALONZ available. The Drop Point measures 5 1/4" overall with a 2 1/2" blade. The Tanto blade is 5" overall and the blade is 2 1/16". Each is one piece white ceramic construction with black para-cord wrapped grip and lanyard hole with attached lanyard. Has molded sheath with a ball chain. Knife and sheath together weigh less than 2 ounces!
Special intro pricing on BF:
TALONZ Drop Point $39.95 shipped (retail $48)
TALONZ Tanto Blade $44.95 shipped (retail $52)
PM or email cougar3677@yahoo.com. Price includes Priority Mail shipping w/ delivery confirmation and paypal fees.
Be one of the first to own a TALONZ!
TALONZ AT BLADE SHOW 2012....TABLE 26M....STOP BY AND FONDLE A TALONZ!!
I have one of these and it is a fantastic knife it is soooo light you barely feel like it's there around your neck.
how brittle are these? I know it's not reasonable to expect them to survive being dropped onto concrete since they are ceramic, but are they more sturdy than a ceramic kitchen knife?
[present at the creation: previously incarnated as fishface, since 10/98]
the beatings will continue until morale improves
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