I was jealous and needed one of my own (May 2022):
I was jealous and needed one of my own (May 2022):
Needed some practice since it was awhile since the last one.
This is from a truck coil spring (April 2022):
We found some old hardware when digging a rotted old landscaping tie out of the garden slope. So…
Rail spike and red oak (May 2020):
The “Birudashi” is a play on the Japanese kiridashi knife style with a bottle opener of some sort on the back end. These blades are like giant X-Acto(tm) or utility knives and work extremely well as a slim EDC. I make standard 4-hole (full size/large) and 3-hole (mini) versions. Both versions have a single bevel ground on one side (typically the left side) and are sharpened on the opposite side. For the types of cutting *I* do, this works pretty well. However, the asymmetry does cause them to steer oddly in some materials like all single-side ground or sharpened blades.
The Finish is usually straight out of the kiln with the exception of the polished main bevel.
To SAFELY unsheath the Birudashi, grasp the sheath by the lanyard grommets and the knife by the tang and lanyard. Jerk quickly. You can also simply pull on the sheath lanyard. Do NOT grasp the sheath OVER the knife or you will be holding it into the sheath and it will be very hard to release. NEVER EVER put your thumb in the curve of the sheath or you will cut it wide open:
There are two models of bottle opener on the back end:
In both cases, PLEASE only use the opener with the knife IN the sheath! Both models are made of very tough AEB-L and can stand a bit of of prying, but beware that the sheath is ON and it is probably the limiting factor. Do NOT pry with the blade tip ever, or you will snap it off.
I often carry a Birudashi with the sheath half-hitched to a belt loop or pack strap, and then tucked away in a pocket of my pants, jacket, or bag, depending. This way the sheath doesn’t get lost when I use the knife. The larger size with two grommets in the sheath fits the diagonal hole spacing on a Blade-Tech Mini Tech-Lock clip, which can be used to attach it to a belt or pack strap.
The smaller model is right on the verge of fitting into an Altoids tin, for the preppers out there. Some do, some don’t. It’s worth a check. I carry a small one tethered to my firesteel in my hiking pack.
Both models work VERY well as a firesteel scraper. Use the edges of the polished bevel, but not the cutting edge itself.
Link to this post: