- Joined
- Nov 14, 2009
- Messages
- 1
The knife in review is the enzo trapper. while it is extremely basic, its probably the most utilized knife i have in my inventory. also this is my first post
the trapper has a blade length of just under 4 inches and an overall length of 8 1/2 inches. Weight is somewhere around 6 oz. The steel is D2 and the edge is a scandi. handle scales are curly birch backed with red micarta. the sheath is a little chinsy but deffinately functional
This showed up as a kit knife. handle scales, hardware, sheath, and the knife itself. theres not a lot that has to be done as far as finishing it. epoxy the scales, tighten hardware, grind and sand. i think the whole process took less than 4 hours. for people that havent ever done stuff like this(me) theres even a little video from enzo to watch and follow.
ive put it thru some tough trials, but one of the things i was most impressed with is that it was able clean and quarter a deer and then make feather sticks without needing a sharpening. im very happy with this purchase. excellent investment without breaking the bank.
the trapper has a blade length of just under 4 inches and an overall length of 8 1/2 inches. Weight is somewhere around 6 oz. The steel is D2 and the edge is a scandi. handle scales are curly birch backed with red micarta. the sheath is a little chinsy but deffinately functional
This showed up as a kit knife. handle scales, hardware, sheath, and the knife itself. theres not a lot that has to be done as far as finishing it. epoxy the scales, tighten hardware, grind and sand. i think the whole process took less than 4 hours. for people that havent ever done stuff like this(me) theres even a little video from enzo to watch and follow.
ive put it thru some tough trials, but one of the things i was most impressed with is that it was able clean and quarter a deer and then make feather sticks without needing a sharpening. im very happy with this purchase. excellent investment without breaking the bank.