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  2. Hunting knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunting_knife

    A hunting knife with a deer-antler handle. Hunting knives are traditionally designed for cutting rather than stabbing, and usually have a single sharpened edge. The blade is slightly curved on most models, and some hunting knives may have a blade that has both a curved portion for skinning, and a straight portion for cutting slices of meat.

  3. Deba bōchō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deba_bōchō

    Debas have wide blades and are the thickest of all Japanese kitchen knives and come in different sizes — sometimes up to 30 centimetres (12 inches) in length and 10 millimetres (0.4 inches) thick — but usually considerably shorter, normally between 12 and 20 cm (5 and 8 in) long with a blade between 5 and 7 mm (0.2 and 0.3 in) thick.

  4. Fillet knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fillet_knife

    All fillet knives must be flexible. Fillet knife blades are made very thin, approximately 2.5–3.5 mm at the spine, so that they can still bend and flex and maintain an edge. If the knife were hard enough to maintain an edge and the blade was thick, the knife would not bend enough to remove the skin from a fillet or work around intricate rib ...

  5. Utility knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_knife

    Finnish outdoor utility knife, puukko Retractable blade knife with replaceable utility blade A utility knife is any type of knife used for general manual work purposes. [1] Such knives were originally fixed-blade knives with durable cutting edges suitable for rough work such as cutting cordage, cutting/scraping hides, butchering animals, cleaning fish scales, reshaping timber, and other tasks.

  6. Ginsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ginsu

    A 1968 Cinécraft spot showed how Quikut knives always stayed sharp and could cut a tomato and then a tree. Ginsu knives are an evolution of a product line developed by the Clyde Castings Company. The company filed for a trademark on the Quikut name for use on carving knives, butcher knives, fruit knives, kitchen knives and can openers in 1921. [3]

  7. Strider Knives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strider_Knives

    Strider fixed blade knives utilize Steel, Paracord or G-10 fiberglass for the handle material. Strider uses a proprietary heat treatment originally developed by Paul Bos of Buck Knives. [2] This resulted in knives with blades of ATS-34 or BG-42 coming back from heat treat with a very dark colored blade which would then be bead blasted a flat ...

  8. X-Acto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Acto

    An X-Acto knife equipped with a "Number 2" blade Parts of an X-Acto knife from left to right: (1) handle, (2) collar, (3) collet, (4) blade. An X-Acto knife is a blade mounted on a pen-like aluminum body. A knurled collar loosens and tightens an aluminum collet with one slot, which holds a replaceable blade.

  9. Gerber Mark II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerber_Mark_II

    The Gerber Mark II is a fighting knife manufactured by Gerber Legendary Blades from 1966 to 2000, with an additional limited run of 1500 in 2002, [1] and full production resuming as of July 2008. [2] It was designed by retired United States Army Captain, Clarence A. “Bud” Holzmann, who based the pattern on a Roman Mainz Gladius .

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