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Touring Utility Knife
I just picked up a Fremont Farson Blade. Check out the below video. You can either ignore or pay attention to the fact that is is a survival video. I used it to see the usefulness, weight and pack-ability for touring and also my backpacking. While backpacking and bike touring (bike camping) I do take a fixed blade knife and a small folder and find all kind of uses for it. For a few trips I am going to take this Farson blade in addition to my normal knives and see if I can replace anything.
NEW! Bushcraft / Survival / Hunting Paracord Tool - Farson Blade Survival Tool - From Fremont Knives - YouTube |
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I fail to see any advantages this has over a conventional knife which I'm sure can cut an apple equally well. If you already carry a Folder and a fixed blade then why bother with this? |
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On the Farson... I think that taking a folder and a fixed blade is already overkill. Adding another blade doesn't make sense to me. Not sure what it weighs, but it looks way heavier than most small folders or fixed blades. On the other hand if you don't care about weight carried and enjoy having another blade it is your choice. I don't recommend it though. |
Where's the corkscrew?
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Reminds me of those famous Ronco Veg-o-matic commercials. Only knife I bring into the woods is a very small keyring knife & I've made it back every time.
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I like how they are rethinking the form factor for survival knives. my Dad is a collector, I'll mention it o him.
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I actually sort of like it but I'd never carry it on a ride. What it seems to add utility over things that people already use (that are also smaller) is chopping wood. Much more wood is chopped in people's imagination than in real life. (What the heck is it with all the wood chopping?)
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WM, I think the greatest attribute of that knife is for a fist fight. My father (RIP) collected knives and I wish I could ask him what he thought of the design. I think he would've liked the simplicity. I tend to favor the Boy Scout jack knife type of design and have a couple of Victorinox models.
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+1 Openel in the cooking gear, and a Victorinox . plus the eyeglass screw driver in the corkscrew.
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A Swiss Army knife would be much better for spreading peanut butter.:)
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I've been carrying a Leatherman Juice cs4: corkscrew, bottle opener, decent blade, but mostly the pliers and wire cutter for cable and spoke problems, though I've never had such a problem on tour. Still, it's a knife and a corkscrew and I'd feel silly without either of those. Of course my Swiss Army is better in those departments, but the pliers are enough of an inducement to carry a couple extra ounces. I carry a Micra when I hike.
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I sometimes carry a Climber model - corkscrew, 2 blades, screwdriver, bottle opener, can opener, scissors, toothpick. It's got a couple other tools that are practically useless - otherwise it's a decent basic knife-tool. I'd delete the unused tools if I could to save weight for backpackiing, Climber Swiss Army Knife SAKWiki | Climber |
Personally I find that kind of "wood-craft" tool unnecessary for bike touring. I do a lot of stealth camping and never light fires. I do carry a Leatherman which has been put to good touring use, over the years.
Even for backpacking, I long ago ditched my hunting knife. The only backpacking "tool" I carry now is 1.2 ounce box-cutter. |
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I've read many debates about carrying both a fixed blade as well as a folder. I could CERTAINLY get by with just my fixed blade as I use it for everything. I've dug with it, opened cans, sliced food, etc. etc. If I opted to just carry one it would be it. I just personally like to carry a very specific folder with me. It's a scalpel knife folder (Replaceable blade skinning knives and hunting knives by Havalon Knives) and I find it useful, but not minimalist necessary. Supposedly the Farson is fairly light, probably lighter than the fixed blade I prefer to take along. After I take it with me on a few trips I will probably see that it doesn't replace anything well enough to switch. It will be fun figuring that out. |
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I like how this can be a scraper for hides. Sure you could do that with a fixed blade or a rock but not as easy. |
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I find that I'm immediately prejudiced against any product that needs a flashy video ( a helicopter? REALLY? ) to market it.
Somehow I've managed to survive for decades with nothing more than an old Swiss Army Knife, recently replaced with a lock-blade version. |
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You can't be prepared for everything and people tend to carry more crap than they should. This seems to a very likely candidate for the "leave at home" pile. It is an interesting design/idea. Quote:
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Interesting, and probably fun to play around with a little as you planed on doing. I don't think it would replace a regular 4-5" fixed blade as a standard camp carry knife. I'm not sure why everyone is so down on just having fun and trying it out. I'm sure it'll keep you entertained for a while.
Also for a few others talking about the video, it definitely seemed to me that this guy is simply doing a knife review. This "flashy video" isn't the company trying to sell the product. It's just a guy with a youtube channel who likes to review outdoor gear. |
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