I got a question

Joined
Aug 14, 2008
Messages
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We all know when comparing the "large" beckers what we are looking for. We want to see the king beasting through some wood, we want to see it batoned and chopping.

When comparing the tweeners, what kind of stuff are you looking for to be compared? I was thinking of doing a review of the tweeners along with my Esee -3 -4. But I was trying to think of what people would want to see done.

What do you use your 3-5" knives for?

Personally I use mine for all my "mundane" tasks. I don't use them for much bushcrafting. Although when I'm out camping I use them more so. When I'm at home though, it's when I need a steak cut, when I need to open mail/packages, when I need to cut a tag or a coupon out of a page, when I need to cut a piece of tape, etc.
 
Tweeners are for feather sticks, light batoning, dressing small game, and food prep mostly. But I'm always looking for new ways to incorporate them into my daily activities.
 
i used mine mostly in the kitchen right now

the D2 is a beast, bbq, acids, onions, garlic, whatever. no staining, no rust, no patina.
 
I use my tweeners for all of my light-duty tasks - stuff around the garage mostly. My BK14 is also my primary food prep knife (when I'm not using my economical Chicago Cutlery knives).
 
I would love to see Ethan Chime in here, because he of all people knows exactly what they were made for and are capable of.
For me, I would like to see a test its limits, review on a few knives in this size. They will do a lot more than people give them credit for.
 
i used mine mostly in the kitchen right now

the D2 is a beast, bbq, acids, onions, garlic, whatever. no staining, no rust, no patina.

Wait... Are you implying a D2 Tweener?
Good stuff.
That's right up in my want list with an S30V BK2!
 
I use my bk16 for most wood crafts, whittling, carving, traps and snare setting, ect.
My bk14 is used mostly for cutting open packages, tape, rope, openening food and most normal around the house knife needs.
my bk9 is used mostly for chopping and preparing firewood and sizing large wood for shelters
 
I think it would work great for deer processing but I just got it. So too late for that.
 
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