- Joined
- Jan 18, 2003
- Messages
- 3,734
I think he heans jimping which is the filed grooves in the spine.....unless he means that jumping-jack dance he does his shirt off 

The BladeForums.com 2024 Traditional Knife is ready to order! See this thread for details:
https://www.bladeforums.com/threads/bladeforums-2024-traditional-knife.2003187/
Price is $300 $250 ea (shipped within CONUS). If you live outside the US, I will contact you after your order for extra shipping charges.
Order here: https://www.bladeforums.com/help/2024-traditional/ - Order as many as you like, we have plenty.
The amount of material behind the edge depends on what the tool is made for. This one is made and will handle the abuse of chopping, .030 + behind the edge. My skinners have .020 behind the edge. I have seen many flat ground knives way thinner than that.
I personaly have'nt seen a hollow ground blade bind in anything can you give me an example?
That's a real beauty, nice work. Nice collection of EDCs on your site.
That is a gorgeous looking knife! I like the looks of the knife, very sturdy looking but it doesn't really say bushcraft to me. When Im looking at it I see a hunting knife. It's probably the integral style and the handle design, what appears to be a clip point and the guard. The design will Im sure work fine as a bushcraft/camp knife.
The tang taper is a great choice. Overall blade length is good, 5 inch is perfect in my opinion and your's is right there.
What I personally would prefer designwise in a bushcraft & camp knife is slightly thinner blade, 3/16 if you're looking for robustness. 1/4 is just unnecessarily heavy duty although your grind goes almost to spine.
The hollow grind is fine with me assuming it's not very concave in shape.
I would however thin down the edge shoulder, in my experience a 0.015 - 0.020 inches makes a good multipurpose edge with great cutting power. I would ask you to convex it though id it was for me, it does improve double bevel cutting and splitting performance with wood.
Finally the handle might benefit from a rounder cross sectional profile, it looks a little boxy judging by the pictures. Without handling your knife is hard to say how it would work in a long work session but bushcraft knives should have a really comfortable handle that indexes well with bare hands as well as gloves.
I hope I didn't come out too harsh. It really looks great! The owner gets a great knife!
Your comments and opinions are very welcome. This is what I want, feedback good or bad.As I said this is a prototype. Blade grind, thickness, blade material is all up to the customer.I made this one from 1/4" because I am testing/abusing it. This one as with most of my prototypes are not for sale. Sometimes I give them to close friends.The handle is very comfortable even with heavy gloves.My hollow grinds are carried back so there is about 3/4" to 7/8" of .030" material befor it becomes concave.The edge on this one is flat or stone sharpened, 12.5 degrees. One of the test I have done so far is batoning through a 2 x 4 across the grain.( the 4" way) No damage to the knife or the edge.
Very nice Loveless Style knife. :thumbup::thumbup:
Id loose the jimpling and one of the lanyard tubes.
But thats just me.
Very nice work. :thumbup: :thumbup:
Big Mike
I like the lanyard holes the way they are. A choice of how to attach the paracord is something many makers ignore.
I also agree that for a camp/bushcraft knife, the hollow grind is the least attractive option.
The finish, fit and style of the blade though, is first class.