HELP Allen Blade Name a New Knife!

Hi Allen, I was thinking maybe the "Adventurer", kinda goes good with Allen Blade and doesn't sound too hokey.

Jake
 
OK, after sitting in class for an hour I came up with some more.

-Justice of the Peace (JOP)
-Monsoon
-Typhoon
-Vulcan
-Panther
-Seminole
-Renegade
-Rambler
-Nomad
-Bandit
-Highwayman

David
 
I second Christian, I like the sound of "Equinox" or I like anything with Badger in the name
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as in a couple of Hillbillenigma's suggestions.

-Badger
 
Great lines. With curves like that it could be waiting around any corner. Like a:

Road Agent
or
Steel Soultan (ie. SS1,SS3,etc.)
Hellrazor

Just a couple ideas, good luck, Jason
 
Well nobody said I couldn't suggest some names as well.

I would go with a name like, "Campion" not a real word, but kind of says Champion Camp Knife

We often call objects 'she' as a female name with some meaning I would suggest Mariah
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not for Mariah Carey, but from the song..."They call the wind Mariah"
Of course you could do a companion piece the Brittany Spear.....
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I love Native American names, Apache, Cheyenne, and Shoshoni (who I believe are called the Snake people) seems to fit.

------------------
"Will work 4 Knives!"
My PhotoPoint Site

[This message has been edited by PhilL (edited 09-25-2000).]

[This message has been edited by PhilL (edited 09-25-2000).]
 
How about something special like "Tu-Long"?
That means "Dragon Killer" in Chinese.
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Or just "DragonKiller"? It looks powerful and ready to do the killing thing IMHO.
 
You could put red or burgundy micarta on the first 25 and call it the "Red Wolf" then put your usual micarta on the field grade and call it the "Grey Wolf". That would be a special distinction between the first 25 and the rest.

[This message has been edited by det (edited 09-25-2000).]
 
How about;

R.O.K. (Recurve Operational / Outdoors Knife)

Eagerly awaiting my Field Trek.

Kirk
 
How about The Skraeling in honor of the native American Inuit people with whom Viking explorers traded iron knives and swords for walrus ivory and bear skins during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries ...
 
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