A question for Warren Thomas experts

Charlie Mike

Sober since 1-7-14 (still a Paranoid Nutjob)
Knifemaker / Craftsman / Service Provider
Joined
Nov 1, 2000
Messages
28,365
I need an ID on this one. I just got it and don't know what it's called.





 
As an aside, I had never seen one of those before this thread. I clicked on it and profanity started flowing like the Mississippi River. That is a sexy knife!
 
Blade is almost 1/4" thick.
 
I dont know what that is, but after all it was a beautiful blade

o.png
 
It's all good.

(Cuz it's mine)
 
It appears to be one of his laminated CF and Ti blades. He's made quite a few over the years.

I've owned several of Warren's knives including an all Ti lefty balisong.
 
I made it my b***h

[video=youtube;aNvLJsb7p3o]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNvLJsb7p3o[/video]
 
How reliable is the waving on that now? That hook looks pretty sharp. Good looking knife, I haven't seen a model quite like that before. It could be a one off.
 
It appears to be one of his laminated CF and Ti blades. He's made quite a few over the years.

I've owned several of Warren's knives including an all Ti lefty balisong.

How do those work practically? IE the TI and CF combo when cutting, how fast do they dull and how do they sharpen etc.
 
Last edited:
How reliable is the waving on that now? That hook looks pretty sharp. Good looking knife, I haven't seen a model quite like that before. It could be a one off.

For a wave this small to work, it needs to be sharp.
 
How do those work practically? IE the TI and CF combo when cutting, how fast do they dull and how do they sharpen etc.

The most important factor with that Ti blade is the carbide edge that is placed on it. You see that line of wavy silver stuff on the
presentation side? It's like a permanent sandpaper that is harder than the knife material. I have only used a couple but I firmly
believe that Ti blades are not the best for EDC cutting. They are, however, light, rust proof and perfectly capable in an emergency
situation.
 
Back
Top