Review The Glock knife

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I just got a Glock knife from a friend of mine as I bought him a knife recently. And he really wanted me to beat the hell out of it together with him.

I know that some of the stuff we did with it isn't really intended use for a knife, and is pretty much abuse. That being said, it is even mild compared to the stuff I did with some other knives.

First impressions:
1. lightly rounded tip and few slight rolls on part of not that sharp edge...
Grind not symmetrical, and is generally bad, but considering the price - I'll cut them some slack.

2. Comfortable handle and nice and functional sheath. Ambidextrous, no complaints here.

3. The knife comes oiled with something that smells awful.


Maintenance:
It's ridiculously time consuming to sharpen for a carbon steel. It is hard to get it sharp.
Coating is rather easy to peel off so you'll need to oil it a lot.

Usage:

1. Handle is comfortable and has no hot spots. It did get slippy when wet.

2. Guard is sometimes getting in the way, but it's still better to have it than not to have it.

3. Terrible for slicing, not much better for chopping.

4. It has nice balance to it so I can see why would army use it.

5. Beer opener does the job well.


Steel performance:

1. Terrible, simply TERRIBLE edge retention.

2. Surprisingly decent for batoning (but that is kinda useless considering you'll probably never need to baton at all) but will also damage your baton.

3. My friend actually bent the tip on an accident. He used it to pry off tree bark for no particular reason. And what shocked me the most is that I was able to straighten it back by stabbing into wood and prying in the other direction?!?!

4. I was throwing it just for fun, solid thrower, tip again got bent, straightened and then bent in another direction. But edge did suffer from some rolls, despite being very obtuse.

5. I did some batoning again just for fun and when I came home I noticed that entire knife has some curve to it.


To sum it up:
That's a bayonet or sharpened pry bar. It sucks as a knife. It's just soft steel.

The best thing about this knife is bottle opener.

Intended use of this is probably just lots of stabbing and sometimes prying, I can't see steel this soft breaking, you don't really need edge retention on something you use to stab.

It is a good bayonet or field knife.
But it performs rather poor as general use or bushcraft knife. It can still do these tasks - just not that good.

We lost it somewhere after that, I think beer has played role in there tho.
 
I carried a Glock knife as a medic in the Army. It was good for opening IV bags, prying open ammo crates and anything that needed stabbing. It's a great penetrating knife, but not a very efficient cutter, as the primary grind is very obtuse and the steel was soft. For the money, it's a great little beater knife. YMMV obviously.
 
I just got a Glock knife from a friend of mine as I bought him a knife recently. And he really wanted me to beat the hell out of it together with him.

I know that some of the stuff we did with it isn't really intended use for a knife, and is pretty much abuse. That being said, it is even mild compared to the stuff I did with some other knives.

First impressions:
1. lightly rounded tip and few slight rolls on part of not that sharp edge...
Grind not symmetrical, and is generally bad, but considering the price - I'll cut them some slack.

2. Comfortable handle and nice and functional sheath. Ambidextrous, no complaints here.

3. The knife comes oiled with something that smells awful.


Maintenance:
It's ridiculously time consuming to sharpen for a carbon steel. It is hard to get it sharp.
Coating is rather easy to peel off so you'll need to oil it a lot.

Usage:

1. Handle is comfortable and has no hot spots. It did get slippy when wet.

2. Guard is sometimes getting in the way, but it's still better to have it than not to have it.

3. Terrible for slicing, not much better for chopping.

4. It has nice balance to it so I can see why would army use it.

5. Beer opener does the job well.


Steel performance:

1. Terrible, simply TERRIBLE edge retention.

2. Surprisingly decent for batoning (but that is kinda useless considering you'll probably never need to baton at all) but will also damage your baton.

3. My friend actually bent the tip on an accident. He used it to pry off tree bark for no particular reason. And what shocked me the most is that I was able to straighten it back by stabbing into wood and prying in the other direction?!?!

4. I was throwing it just for fun, solid thrower, tip again got bent, straightened and then bent in another direction. But edge did suffer from some rolls, despite being very obtuse.

5. I did some batoning again just for fun and when I came home I noticed that entire knife has some curve to it.


To sum it up:
That's a bayonet or sharpened pry bar. It sucks as a knife. It's just soft steel.

The best thing about this knife is bottle opener.

Intended use of this is probably just lots of stabbing and sometimes prying, I can't see steel this soft breaking, you don't really need edge retention on something you use to stab.

It is a good bayonet or field knife.
But it performs rather poor as general use or bushcraft knife. It can still do these tasks - just not that good.

We lost it somewhere after that, I think beer has played role in there tho.
Sounds about right. For the price, I’d rather get a Kabar, Ontario, Esee, or Tops fixed blade.
 
IMG-20211012-182108986.jpg
 
Do they even make/sell the Glock knife anymore? I'd like to have a few more, for old times sake and just to keep them around the garage and shop for beater knives. I have Moras, but would love to have another Glock. Something different.
 
I carried a Glock knife as a medic in the Army. It was good for opening IV bags, prying open ammo crates and anything that needed stabbing. It's a great penetrating knife, but not a very efficient cutter, as the primary grind is very obtuse and the steel was soft. For the money, it's a great little beater knife. YMMV obviously.
It's best function is stabbing. That's fure sure. Narrow blades will always do much better at that than wide blades.
 
Do they even make/sell the Glock knife anymore? I'd like to have a few more, for old times sake and just to keep them around the garage and shop for beater knives. I have Moras, but would love to have another Glock. Something different.
Oh yes, plenty.
But the FM78 , without the saw, is only available in all black. The FM81 is in several colours available.

Some claim that the FM78 is being discontinued. This is not true. Having had e-mail contact with Glock company about this. The knives are also to be found on their website.
In Europe the Glock FM78 can be found online easily.
 
I think we all know it's not made of the best steel, and there are better knives. But there is no denying this knife has a strong following, and that it has a strong brand, and it's damned cool. For a military issue knife, it ticks all the boxes.
 
Good review, same observations here. Picked up one used, found out the steel doesn’t hold edge very well,
too thick for cutting food. Lost it somewhere.
‘IMO, existing of the Glock knife is just the company cashing on the name, the knife is very mediocre, hardly good even for a truck knife...
‘It was sort of intended to be as some of the Becker models but the result is far from the intention, those Beckers are much more superior than Glock knife.
‘Some people like it, that’s fine, I wouldn’t spend money on it unless as Marty said - you got lots of G branded stuff and the knife will make nice addition, curio item. This is the way I see it, everything in the review would be same as I would put, if I wasted time with this particular knife.
 
Good review, same observations here. Picked up one used, found out the steel doesn’t hold edge very well,
too thick for cutting food. Lost it somewhere.
‘IMO, existing of the Glock knife is just the company cashing on the name, the knife is very mediocre, hardly good even for a truck knife...
‘It was sort of intended to be as some of the Becker models but the result is far from the intention, those Beckers are much more superior than Glock knife.
‘Some people like it, that’s fine, I wouldn’t spend money on it unless as Marty said - you got lots of G branded stuff and the knife will make nice addition, curio item. This is the way I see it, everything in the review would be same as I would put, if I wasted time with this particular knife.
When I think of a “Glock” branded knife, I think of something less than “Smith & Wesson”… and you can find s&w knives on the checkout counter at auto parts stores. Just not something I associate with the word “quality”.
 
Good review, same observations here. Picked up one used, found out the steel doesn’t hold edge very well,
too thick for cutting food. Lost it somewhere.
‘IMO, existing of the Glock knife is just the company cashing on the name, the knife is very mediocre, hardly good even for a truck knife...
‘It was sort of intended to be as some of the Becker models but the result is far from the intention, those Beckers are much more superior than Glock knife.
‘Some people like it, that’s fine, I wouldn’t spend money on it unless as Marty said - you got lots of G branded stuff and the knife will make nice addition, curio item. This is the way I see it, everything in the review would be same as I would put, if I wasted time with this particular knife.
The knife came before the pistol by several years so this isn't Glock cashing in on the name. It was also around long before the Becker knives. Glock designed the knife in cooperation with the Austrian army as a combination field tool and bayonet. It was never intended to be a toy for American bushcrafters etc.
 
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