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  2. Woodchipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodchipper

    The cutting blades of a small electric chipper. The blades can be removed, by loosening the bolt in the center, to facilitate sharpening or for replacement. Much larger machines for wood processing exist. "Whole tree chippers" and "Recyclers", which can typically handle material diameters of 60–180 cm (2–6 ft) may employ drums, disks, or a ...

  3. Woodchips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodchips

    The blades slice through the wood as the material is fed through the chute. Knives located in the throat of the chipper cuts the wood in the opposite direction. The design is not as energy efficient as other styles but produces consistent shapes and sizes of woodchips.

  4. Colorado Man Survives Losing Both Legs in Freak Wood Chipper ...

    www.aol.com/colorado-man-survives-losing-both...

    The chipper blades flipped the branch’s hook around, which caught in O’Neill’s court-ordered ankle monitor and dragged him into the wood chipper.

  5. Western Knife Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Knife_Company

    Early Western States knives were manufactured by Challenge, New York Knife Company, Valley Forge, Utica, and W. R. Case & Sons, among others. Although the business was prospering and a manufacturing facility would have been in order, it would be several years coming. World War I had begun and had brought shortages of material and labor.

  6. Imperial Schrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Schrade

    Imperial Schrade Corp. was an American knife manufacturer of hunting knives, pocketknives, utility knives, and bayonets during the 20th and early 21st centuries. The consolidation of five forerunner companies, [1] including its namesakes, the Imperial Knife Company, founded 1916, and the Schrade Cutlery Company, founded in 1904, Imperial Schrade manufactured its products in the United States ...

  7. Gerber Legendary Blades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerber_Legendary_Blades

    Gerber LHR Combat Knife designed by Matt Larsen, Bill Harsey and Chris Reeve These are two of the most popular Gerber knives. The smaller is the Gerber LMF II and the larger is the Gerber LHR Sheath knife. Gerber Legendary Blades is an American maker of knives, multitools, and other tools for outdoors and military headquartered in Portland, Oregon.

  8. Blade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blade

    This lets a lightweight knife have a larger curve on its edge and indeed the whole of the knife may be curved. Such a knife is optimized for slicing or slashing. Trailing point blades provide a larger cutting area, or belly, and are common on skinning knives. Drop-point blade S3 A drop point blade has a convex curve of the back towards the point.

  9. Spyderco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spyderco

    In 1994, it was the first company to use powder metallurgy in a production knife (in the form of Crucible's S60V tool steel), and the first knife company to use H-1 steel in a folding knife. [16] The Mule Team Project offers end users fixed-blade knife in various steels for the performance testing. [17] Spyderco's current Steel Chart PDF.

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