Knife World's Biggest LIE: "Super Steels"

  Рет қаралды 76,245

Dutch Bushcraft Knives

Dutch Bushcraft Knives

Жыл бұрын

Thanks to MANSCAPED for sponsoring today’s video! Get 20% OFF + Free International Shipping + 2 Free Gifts this holiday season with our promo code “DBK” at mnscpd.com/DutchBushcraftKnives
We test a lot of 'super steels' on this channel.... but what is a super steel? Is it actually a real thing?
And if so... are non super steels even still a thing? In this video we share our thoughts on this subject. Do you throw away all your non super steel knives? or can you still wear them with pride.... find out in todays episode!
DBK Zippo now also in antique Silver!
dbkshop.com/
Support us by buying from Tools for Gents (affiliate)
bit.ly/Tools4GentsDBK
For USA support affiliate support you can buy at BladeHQ (affiliate)
shrsl.com/20i50
Join Our monthly giveaway Give-Away! Join the royal knife club to participate. THANKS!
bit.ly/DBK-MonthyGiveAway
________________________ Shops!________________________
Support us by buying from our shop!
bit.ly/DBKshop
Awesome shop in Europe (affiliate)
bit.ly/Tools4GentsDBK
BladeHQ Knife shop USA: (affiliate)
shrsl.com/20i50
________________________ Check us out!________________________
Check out our Patreon Give-Away and support the channel:
bit.ly/DBKPatreon
hidden message: Mikkie is an ugly unwanted child
Discord!: / discord
Insta: bit.ly/DBKInstagram
FB: bit.ly/DBKFacebook
____________________________Music:_____________________________
#Knife #supersteel #MYTH

Пікірлер: 602
@DutchBushcraftKnives
@DutchBushcraftKnives Жыл бұрын
Thanks to MANSCAPED for sponsoring today’s video! Get 20% OFF + Free International Shipping + 2 Free Gifts this holiday season with our promo code “DBK” at mnscpd.com/DutchBushcraftKnives
@cliveadams7629
@cliveadams7629 Жыл бұрын
What steel do they use in their mower?
@tphvictims5101
@tphvictims5101 Жыл бұрын
When was the last time you guys tested yourselves with a 3 night Bushcraft trip ?
@rocknrollguitar
@rocknrollguitar Жыл бұрын
That! Until true Damascus is reinvented
@richardabrahamse936
@richardabrahamse936 Жыл бұрын
Comment for the a…
@DutchBushcraftKnives
@DutchBushcraftKnives Жыл бұрын
@@britishbrodog5473 uhhm. I guess your lady is a bushcrafter as well.😂 Mine prefers a mowed lawn
@mysticforge369
@mysticforge369 Жыл бұрын
As a small scale custom knife maker I can't realistically make knives from super steel. I absolutely love 1095 because it's so easy to work with, easy to forge, very forgiving in the heat treat, not super expensive, and you can give it a decent range of heat treatments that lend the knife different qualities. Great video guys.
@lyonmandan
@lyonmandan Жыл бұрын
1095 continues to be one of my favorites.
@donwaldroopoutdoors3665
@donwaldroopoutdoors3665 Жыл бұрын
Not the most entertaining but definitely your most thought provoking
@sabelfechter7136
@sabelfechter7136 Жыл бұрын
Def check out 52100, as simple but better than 1095. Also read the UltraApex article by Larrin, it seems to be the best smithing steel.
@mysticforge369
@mysticforge369 Жыл бұрын
@@sabelfechter7136 interesting I'll do some research thank you.
@svenvanderzwaag1012
@svenvanderzwaag1012 Жыл бұрын
Heattreating supersteels is not hard at all. You cant really forge supersteels that is true, but making knives out of super steel is not complex at all. You just want to get an electric oven. You can diy one for very cheap. Also you will want to airplate quench the blades. Getting the right equipment might be a little investment, but no more than a proper propane heattreating setup would cost.
@TonyHoldenEsquire
@TonyHoldenEsquire Жыл бұрын
I'm 56 years old, I've been using knives since I was about 6 years old. I also spent many years in the British Army. I've used so many different steels, I still prefer a 1095 or 440c that I can sharpen easily in a minute or two, or strop back to a razors edge than anything else.
@coobay4786
@coobay4786 Жыл бұрын
It's nothing but fish baits.
@MrPocketfullOfSteel
@MrPocketfullOfSteel Жыл бұрын
Agree Tony, I believe we should receive a 'free gift' from these young fellas, see how we made it to 56yrs.of age.🥳👍 I agree with your take on knives, I believe I've actually forgotten more than some even know of steels. Thankfully, I've wrote down my observations of my different steels over the years. 😄
@RiderOftheNorth1968
@RiderOftheNorth1968 Жыл бұрын
Being a youngster at mere 54 years old i have to say that VG10 is my favorite steel by far. It is easy to sharpen and gets a very good edge that is fairly durable ( atleast if you treat the knife as a knife and not a crowbar or masonry chisel). But i am not a steel snob so anything that can get a good edge and keep it is okey by me.
@eddieguyvh4765
@eddieguyvh4765 Жыл бұрын
1095 is allright, even great when it's been heat treated correctly. But 440C? I've never seen a 440C blade that holds an edge nor one that isn't ridiculously prone to corrosion. In my opinion, it's almost chinesium at this point. VG-10 beats it on all scales in my opinion and experience. And if you want something really stainless, I still haven't found anything better than H-1 steel: 6 weeks of scuba diving daily without rincing a spyderco fish hunter and it remained in pristine condition. Before knowing this steel, I only thought that some good 316L steel could achieve this level of rust resistance...
@konnorwerth4906
@konnorwerth4906 Жыл бұрын
@@eddieguyvh4765 our ancestors survived with what was a lot less quality than 440c and they actually had to live off there tools. Why should anyone feel like they need some type of godly edge retention to get things done of you know how to sharpen a knife, edge retention shouldn't matter, to a extent.
@alphadawg81
@alphadawg81 Жыл бұрын
I would enjoy more "knife talk" videos like this.
@riverrunner23
@riverrunner23 Жыл бұрын
My 1st BRK just arrived today, the Aurora 3V w/matte green micarta. Finally caved to buying one, in part to yours and many others videos about them. It's amazing. Thanks for all of your hard work in bringing these entertaining and educational vids to us. Merry Christmas, and wishing you all a Happy and Healthy New Year. Enjoy.
@rodlandscape
@rodlandscape Жыл бұрын
hahaha! kiss my 14C28N you, tycoon!
@peterkinberger9741
@peterkinberger9741 Жыл бұрын
I love to watch you guys. You entertain and teach and do things to knives that makes the knives feel very sore afterwards. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you both, and to the ones you love. Thank you for your splendid contribution to the blade world ! Later...
@donm1979
@donm1979 Жыл бұрын
Sandvik's 14C28N has the best balance of properties in any steel available today - incredibly tough, rust resistant, takes a razor edge and easy to sharpen. Edge retention is literally the only category where it is beaten by super steels, but it is superior in virtually every other way. Easy to heat treat and cheap, too.
@rickk4990
@rickk4990 Жыл бұрын
yeah, nitrogen is really interesting, makes it stainless and also tough like non stainless steels
@justinw1765
@justinw1765 4 ай бұрын
Any particular knives good for batoning and generally decent all around, made out of this steel?
@donm1979
@donm1979 4 ай бұрын
@@justinw1765 have a look at Mora
@butcrack6786
@butcrack6786 Жыл бұрын
Got a custom buck 119 in s30. I have all manner of knives in different steels and I have to say Buck's heat treat is freakn crazy. The thing just keeps going.
@Druide-ie1pc
@Druide-ie1pc Жыл бұрын
Agree. I´m a Blacksmith from Germany and I like Buck knives, a lot. The blade geometry is also important. Buck does a great job. A knife has to be sharp and Buck does a great heat treating job.
@StephanGanoff
@StephanGanoff Жыл бұрын
The relationship you build with a knife while sharpening it and taking care of it... Such a good point. Super video
@AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally
@AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally Жыл бұрын
I still use the Jääkaripuukko for years now. Never disappointed me. Resharpening is easy and if it breaks, nothing lost, just get another one for little money. Best bang for the buck ever imho.
@emanuelroth7960
@emanuelroth7960 Жыл бұрын
They seem good, I just wish they had a name I could pronounce or even just remember.
@TAIL313
@TAIL313 Жыл бұрын
I wish they'd ship to England or find a distributor in UK.
@AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally
@AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally Жыл бұрын
@@TAIL313 Varusteleka? I live in Austria and no problem getting it shipped from Finland. Is this a new out of EU problem or are they too long/ forbidden in the UK?
@TAIL313
@TAIL313 Жыл бұрын
@@AllTheGoodNamesGoneReally Yes, they didn't say when I asked them on the webchat on their website.
@KennyT187
@KennyT187 Жыл бұрын
@@TAIL313 They should ship to UK. Unless it's illegal to order knives from abroad to Britain? This is what they say about ordering from UK: "How does Brexit affect ordering from the UK? As dictated by UK officials, UK VAT 20 % will be added to orders with a VAT excluded total of under 135 GBP. We will settle these taxes to the UK Gov. For orders with VAT excluded total of over 135 GBP, prices will be VAT free and you have to pay your local customs fees, taxes and duties when the item is delivered. Logistics companies, e.g. DHL Express, might also add a service fee for declaring your item on your behalf. Yes, we know that this is bat shit stupid."
@gerardvanengelen9001
@gerardvanengelen9001 Жыл бұрын
Good analysis. I would like to add that some knives are ruined by grinding the edge in the factory, such that the heat treatment near the edge is unintentionally changed by the grinding heat.
@MrPocketfullOfSteel
@MrPocketfullOfSteel Жыл бұрын
How true, how true!!! I remember when I would purchase specific pieces....holding my breath and hoping everything was done correctly. I could always tell within one month of serious use and stropping, just trying to get that apex back together. If it wasn't good enough, send it back and try again. That's all you can do IMO.
@HighlanderNorth1
@HighlanderNorth1 Жыл бұрын
❓ As a non-expert in steel heat treatment, I have some curiosity about the point you and the other ↓commenter alluded to: You mentioned that it can be a problem when a knife manufacturer sharpens the blades _after_ heat treating them, which you said can adversely affect the heat treatment at the knife's edge. Then, is it a viable option for the manufacturer to do all the sharpening _BEFORE_ performing the heat treatment
@ElderPinto254
@ElderPinto254 Жыл бұрын
ik volg jullie al tien jaar en nog steeds mijn meest creative messen kanaal van alle kanalen en nog steeds de beste... bedankt voor alle momenten dat ik bijna in mijn broek piste van het lachen !!!!
@arianatataru8482
@arianatataru8482 Жыл бұрын
Thank you guys for the video! Take care and happy new year! This video helped a lot into making knife decisions for the next purchase :D
@williambeiting6643
@williambeiting6643 Жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head. It's mainly about how the knife/ steel works for you and what you might need it to do. Keep up the excellent work, fellas.
@MrAlexH1991
@MrAlexH1991 Жыл бұрын
It’s the knowledge I’ve gained from you guys that has me designing my own knives now. I’m workin on one that if I’m ever able to get it looked at by a real knife maker, then I think they’d actually love it. It’s also got a smaller sister/companion carver. Thanks for telling me all about bushcrafting knives and opening my eyes to the world of knives and knife steels (and all the wonderful little rabbit holes of knowledge therein.) Y’all are the most entertaining teachers I’ve come across. Hail og sæl, DBK Boys.
@ericsmiley1266
@ericsmiley1266 Жыл бұрын
I wish I had friends like you two. Thank you for the videos every week.
@Jayboyd1260
@Jayboyd1260 Жыл бұрын
We can call them whatever we want, "super steel" or whatever. As Mickey and Marten point out our material engineering has come a long way (even in the last ten years, let alone twenty or more), and there are newer steels that have been made that are superior to older steels, but don't forget an excellent heat treat and temper will get you the results and performance you want from a tool 99% of the time. So buyer beware, do some research on a company's manufacture method and quality control before you buy.
@nobodyatall7039
@nobodyatall7039 Жыл бұрын
If you can't bite it with a file then it's useless.
@mdsign001
@mdsign001 Жыл бұрын
Until I found your channel, years ago, I didn't even know the term "super steel" ... you've educated sooooo many people!
@Mo.89.
@Mo.89. Жыл бұрын
This manscaped promotion will live in my memory forever
@k.n.v.b1113
@k.n.v.b1113 Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas boyzzzz , videos have come a long way ! keep up the hard work
@dustinewing7974
@dustinewing7974 Жыл бұрын
I loved powdered steel as soon as I tried it. I'll always have a soft spot for my 1095 knives, but if I had to choose I'd go with my 3v any day!
@tombeard2288
@tombeard2288 Жыл бұрын
I have knifes in everything from Magnacut to 1075 ,fixed to folding and some are 60 years old and it seems to me that craftsmanship (especially heat treat and edge grinding)determine how good a knife is.And I have Terava knives and they are my favorite for outdoor hard use.
@andrewartress9251
@andrewartress9251 Жыл бұрын
I have several knives in super steel, M390, 3V, Cruwear... but my Tops BOB in 154 cm is probably my favorite bushcraft knife. Tops proved to me the value of a good heat treatment.
@donttreadonme1423
@donttreadonme1423 6 ай бұрын
I have the brakimo and it's a beast. I found my lost BRK Aurora Scandi in cruwear the other day so I'm stoked to get it out and see how it performs.
@willblake72
@willblake72 Жыл бұрын
Just what I needed today, a relaxing chat about knives. Cheers boys.
@cliveadams7629
@cliveadams7629 Жыл бұрын
Different alloys have different properties, like everything it's a trade off of benefits and disadvantages. There's no one steel to rule them all, well not yet, they all have their place.
@jls2975
@jls2975 Жыл бұрын
AUS8 is a supersteel ~ Lilly
@DutchBushcraftKnives
@DutchBushcraftKnives Жыл бұрын
hahaha
@GraveyarDiscipl
@GraveyarDiscipl Жыл бұрын
Hey guys! Been watching y'all for a few years now. Partly due to you two knuckleheads, I wanted to design and make my own "everything" knife. I finally did. O1 steel, acid etched for a smooth satin grey finish, convex grind, American Black Locust scales with black liners. I forgot the pins I used though. I used it to gut, skin and butcher my deer this year and after all that, it just needed a good stropping. Not sure where I can send you pictures of it. I'm just really proud of it and to me, it performs as intended. I would definitely not shoot it though since it's the only one in the world like it 😂
@MDM1992
@MDM1992 Жыл бұрын
I own loads of knives and made a lot over the years, I actually hate most of the super steels I own and find them brittle, fragile and more hassle than they're worth as well as massively overpriced, my most used, and cherished blades are made of o1 tool steel and it's never let me down, people complain about rusting, but I hand sand my finishes and let them naturally patina because I use them for literally everything skinning, gutting, carving, prying, splitting, cutting both acidic and non acidic foods etc, and I live on a tiny island surrounded by salt water where it's raining most of the time all year round and even when it's not raining and the suns shining in summer it's still damp, worst rust I've ever encountered is literally a couple of tiny surface spots which I don't worry about until I get home and rub them off with a little 1000 grit sand paper. People just need to learn how to take care of a tool steel and it will reward them with toughness and reliability far beyond any of the super steels I've bought and used. And even if you roll the edge or it goes dull on you, it takes no time at all to get it back to shaving sharp unlike the super steels which need expensive diamond stones or 300 plus worth of sharpening jig set ups because most people got no chance of free hand sharpening them and most stones aren't hard enough to do the job. Old school steel is the best, it wasn't broke so I don't know why anybody tried to fix it.
@johnwyman5939
@johnwyman5939 Жыл бұрын
You two guys are Awesome!!! Keep kicking ass on videos!! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🪓🔪👍👍
@bcasinger
@bcasinger 11 ай бұрын
Just getting into knives and really appreciate your videos for the information and your experience testing knives and steels.
@kyleowen2808
@kyleowen2808 Жыл бұрын
Always well thought out commentary DBK. Appreciated
@joetuktyyuktuk8635
@joetuktyyuktuk8635 Жыл бұрын
The really tricky part, is the heat treatment, quality varies from maker to maker. The "recipe" is literally no different than cooking a meal, you can give the same ingredients to two different people and end up with two completely different meals...
@ASimao71
@ASimao71 Жыл бұрын
Being a hunter, I skin every "rancid pork" I kill and deer and roederer, fox... Só..., I can assure that my super steel knives fare far better than the plain steel ones. With 12c27, 420hc and the like, I have to sharpen mid task. With D2 (it's not a super steel these days) 3V and Elmax, I can do two hogs no problem... Are they worth it? You bet they are. Are they an absolute necessity? No way... Thanks for sharing an unbiased and clarifying comparison! 👍👍👏👏
@MovieGuy666
@MovieGuy666 Жыл бұрын
stop lying... you never skinned anything other than your knee.
@retardno002
@retardno002 2 ай бұрын
​@@MovieGuy666 I killed my first chicken with a rusty knife (didn't have a hatchet) when I was 9, the world is a bigger place than the US and Western Europe, people still live like 100 years ago in many places. Hunters still exist, and yes they do have KZfaq lol.
@leealtmansr.3811
@leealtmansr.3811 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic information. Thanks for being so honest and helpful.
@jaxonbeilner9258
@jaxonbeilner9258 9 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this video,and the conversation.Hello to Mickey and Martin from here in Canada.good day!
@snakecity_edc
@snakecity_edc Жыл бұрын
Great video guys. I really learned a few things from this. Thank you!
@sircassie891
@sircassie891 Жыл бұрын
Always love to see a new video every Thursday
@JoeBamaSmokesCrack
@JoeBamaSmokesCrack Жыл бұрын
I do like when you guys talk seriously about knives without the gimmicks. Like the serene fire making and whittling over the chicanery.
@rangerjonoutdoors6429
@rangerjonoutdoors6429 Жыл бұрын
I find myself coming full circle back around to COS these days and really enjoying its balanced nature. Great discussion!
@Cz82
@Cz82 Жыл бұрын
I explained Super steels to my friend as: Imagine a knife has 3 attributes, Edge retention/hardness, corrosion resistance, toughness/ductility. each steel had a set number of attribute points to invest in each attribute. powder steels have more points to invest than traditionally smelted steel
@MDM1992
@MDM1992 Жыл бұрын
I disagree with that, I have all sorts of fancy "super steels" and still my mostly used and favourite knives are made from well heat treated o1 tool steel, and my every day carry folder is bohler n690co.. never once had an issue with edge retention, corrosion or chipping with those like I have with the super steels which microchip and have nowhere near the same toughness, super steels have been nothing but a pain in the ass in my opinion, everyone is obsessed with edge retention these days and it's silly, it's really not at all hard to sharpen a knife and an edge that lasts ages generally is a very brittle edge. I'd much rather have a dc3 tucked away in my back pocket where it's barely noticeable and carry an o1 tool steel over a super steel that might last a long time, assuming you don't need to do any kind of minor prying and clean snap the tip off, or cut into a slightly sandy piece of wood or slightly knock it on something hard and chip the edge causing an hour plus worth of sharpening to fix lol worst I've ever had with my main users is a slight roll which takes minutes to fix anywhere any time with a dc3 of dc4. Super steels are overpriced, over hyped, and harder to maintain while being able to take less abuse, there's a reason the old steels have been used for over 100 years, it's because they work, and they work well. The best part is the majority of people don't even use their knives like I do and constantly put them through their paces, they literally spend crazy money on a fancy steel to do nothing more than open packaging and letters and think a super steel will be better because they're crap at sharpening knives.. so when that super steel loses its edge or chips on them, they haven't got a hope in hell of being able to sharpen it since they're far more difficult and less forgiving to sharpen lol
@martinerhard8447
@martinerhard8447 Жыл бұрын
Yes thats a good way to explain it. One also sees this with thomas larrins test data on knifesteelnerds. And then people that know nothing about knifes (see the person with the comment above me as an example) get confused when e.g. a maxamet breaks but dont realize that there the "points" mainly went into edge retention. while with 3V it mainly goes into thoughness and magnacut has a very good balance.
@Hungrybird474
@Hungrybird474 Жыл бұрын
Yeah we ll never be in a survival situation but it’s great to know and good to share info for camping alone . Out camping and forgetting something important but knowing how to make what you need is super important . It makes the mind think and the body become active and gives just enough satisfaction . I’m getting the Mario pukka knife now 👍👍. Thanks dudes .
@SteAbs
@SteAbs Жыл бұрын
Nice discussion guys! I always enjoy the videos
@gizmocarr3093
@gizmocarr3093 Жыл бұрын
It is entertaining seeing knives tested, and very hard to say that an expensive knife is worth the cost. There is always going to be opinions that differ. Buying what you like is good to know when seeing what you have to choose from if you want to buy it or not.🙂
@invictus3598
@invictus3598 Жыл бұрын
I always appreciate your opinions regarding knives and their capabilities. The evolution of knives is fraught with failures, but that trial and error methodology continues to define one of the most important pieces of technology that mankind has ever devised. Thank you for your contributions!
@smeeby1
@smeeby1 Жыл бұрын
If commercials were that entertaining I would probable pay more attention to them. lol nice insight fellas.
@user-cs3hi8zp7p
@user-cs3hi8zp7p Жыл бұрын
Love how y'all hit every angle on the subject...pretty sure I agree with everything ya said!!💪😎👍
@PaulK390S90V
@PaulK390S90V Жыл бұрын
Miss you guys... haven't tuned in the last couple years, I look forward to getting caught up!!
@GetMeThere1
@GetMeThere1 Жыл бұрын
Let's never forget how good and practical the Varusteleka knives are (80CrV2 - 59 HRC) and Mora knives (often 1095 - 59 HRC or 12C27). Everyone agrees these are great knives.
@girthbrooks5078
@girthbrooks5078 Жыл бұрын
I will take high carbon tool steel for outdoors use. Can't beat a oldie.
@lalli8152
@lalli8152 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, and the company that does the blades for varusteleka makes ton of blades to different companies. Thats actually where most finnish small knife company blades Come from, but you can buy loose blades for like 5-20€ put your own handle on it instead of buying knife for like 50-150€. That company really is like mora just churning out quality blades. Especially they seem to have nailed the 80crv2 steel.
@poboy8490
@poboy8490 Жыл бұрын
I've had several Moras over the years. The only reason I've had more than one is because I keep passing them onto other people in need of a good dependable blade. I've definitely "abused" them more than i deemed necessary, but they never failed me, and they kept an edge for quite long. Sure, I could have kept those knives, but it was more important to me to make sure someone else had a dependable blade... And hopefully, in using that blade, their eyes were opened a bit more to the vast world of quality knives. I'm always about raising my own and other people's standards if I can lol
@GetMeThere1
@GetMeThere1 Жыл бұрын
@@Butch_Deezlsteak If you look up Mora Companion on Amazon you will find it listed as being sold by "The Mora Store." In the product description is the following: "The Morakniv Companion is an all-in-one knife made for outdoor enthusiasts. Equipped with a patterned, high-friction grip, it’s comfortable to hold and easy to handle. It also features a 4.1-inch (104 mm) blade made of 1095 carbon steel that reaches a hardness of HRC 58-60."
@GetMeThere1
@GetMeThere1 Жыл бұрын
@@Butch_Deezlsteak I think it can vary. When I looked at the Mora site it says its "carbon" blades are made from C100, and elsewhere I found that C100 is similar to 1095. Another site says that C100 is essentially identical to Sandvik 20C Shock Absorber. My main point is that Mora is NOT using "super steels."
@LittleSweed
@LittleSweed Жыл бұрын
Just like an example a steel that has gained alot of ground in the budget knifes is Sandvik 14C28N in later days but that steel is more or less the same as the 14N27 as have been used for over 50 years here in Sweden in very affordable knifes.
@jouzel8951
@jouzel8951 Жыл бұрын
Great video, have been into knives since I can remember,. The first knife I bought, was a ceramic folder, I thunk it was a Gerber in 1985 in Yellowstone park. My dad taught me about the balance between hardness and toughness, I knew the ceramic was hard but not tough, in the end I lost it within a year, lol! Morale of the story, buy what you love(if you can afford it!)
@rdolan2
@rdolan2 Жыл бұрын
Whaaaaat??? DBK Boys waxing eloquent in a video??? I love it. HOWEVER, in watching this video I FINALLY figured out what I admire most about the DBK boys and why I have watched your videos for years now... it's your undying friendship you have and I hope it never ends. Religious or not, Proverbs 18:24 says "...there is a friend who stays closer than a brother." Again, what I have witnessed over the years and admire most is your friendship. Of course as a fellow knife lover, I enjoy the knife stuff too. Have an awesome New Year guys.
@butchismrmoose
@butchismrmoose Жыл бұрын
Love your channel guys. I would love to see a review of Montana Knife Company Speedgoat. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
@Zero_8347
@Zero_8347 Жыл бұрын
In the future, you can make knives with the household atomic printer, and the blade is mostly titanium but fades into steel by the edge which fades into diamond at the apex.
@spocker22
@spocker22 Жыл бұрын
Nah gold titanium tungsten alloy
@user-bg3sb6jw1p
@user-bg3sb6jw1p Жыл бұрын
I can now participate in any debate on steel vs supersteel, a topic I didn’t even know before. Thanks 😆
@steventorres5768
@steventorres5768 Жыл бұрын
I don't go out into the woods without my Gerber Prodigy 420C steel. I have had it for appx. 15 years and it has NEVER let me down. However, I would really like a esee 4 S35VN With burlap Micarta scales... 🙌😍🙏
@roycepearce9314
@roycepearce9314 Жыл бұрын
SAKs get blunt pretty quick with edc use, but get hair popping sharp with a quick strop. For me it comes down to, am I willing to pay 5 times the price just so I don’t have to strop my knife as regularly, and as I find stropping quite relaxing, for me I’m alright with a basic steel. Plus my VG10 F1 holds edge plenty long enough on extended trips, that I’m confident it will last if I end in that 0.000001 survival situation
@Lucatellion
@Lucatellion Жыл бұрын
Watch Destruction tests of F1, they break and chip very easily...
@roycepearce9314
@roycepearce9314 Жыл бұрын
I’ve put mine through hell and I’ve had no issues, but saying that, I’ve only done that in the forest. I can imagine it would chip a bit in the urban jungle cutting through man made materials.
@terrillschneider3778
@terrillschneider3778 Жыл бұрын
One of your best videos ever imo Thanks You guys are very interesting and intelligent young men when you aren’t goofing around lol Merry Christmas Rev Terrill Schneider Michigan
@wisamal-hakim5531
@wisamal-hakim5531 Жыл бұрын
Coming from a material science perspective, remember metals are crystals. When the crystals/grains are big, they are not bonded to each other as well and they ‘slip/dislocate’ more easily than in metals with smaller grains, and these slips can cause fracture lines that cause micro/macroscopic failure, or brittleness. Different alloys mix different particles in between these crystals to stop these slips making a metal ‘harder’ and also providing other advantages such as corrosion resistance. The process of heat treatment and annealing is what converts large crystals into smaller ones. With that in mind, the prep of the steel is almost as important as the steel itself. But also knives are objects and the design of a knife made of steel is also every bit as important, especially the grind. For me I love the grind of a fallkniven independent of which steel they use, they’re all good. Btw you two are so likeable and enjoyable to watch and listen to. Good luck with everything x
@DutchBushcraftKnives
@DutchBushcraftKnives Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this great information and kind words!
@shaveclassy9986
@shaveclassy9986 Жыл бұрын
Good yarn! been looking forward to this upload all week
@isaiah_b_3798
@isaiah_b_3798 Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas boys. I’m still rocking my Bark River Bushcrafter in CPM-3V. IMO this is one of the best Bushcraft knives out there.
@aunrah02
@aunrah02 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for breaking down and explaining the super steals. I'm quite new to this and I have been Googling a lot. So thank you
@sethtenrec
@sethtenrec Жыл бұрын
Don’t shoplift in large quantities
@coaltrain4423
@coaltrain4423 Жыл бұрын
O1 Tool steel,A2,1095,D2,…even properly heat treated 440C blades have been my favorite for years. They were super steel to me and have proven to be such.I have been in some very dangerous and precarious situations over the years requiring a good blade,and never did I have to abuse my blades anywhere near what I’ve seen on these torture tests.My blades always held up well and I’m still here and my knives are too.
@michealbates6369
@michealbates6369 Жыл бұрын
On the topic of survival situations, all of that is great. Unless you live deep in the woods away from everybody and hurricane Katrina has made you homeless. That is what happened to my family and I. Lost just about everything and we were without a home for about 2.5-3 months. We built one, but there wasn't an awfully large safety net for us. Heading to town was not a common occurence for us, we viewed it as risky since people were killing their own siblings over bags of ice. Something tough and easier to sharpen is incredibly valuable at that point. And I never really considered our situation too awfully extreme. We did alright. All of that being said, I love your videos! They always make me smile and make any day better.
@lundysden6781
@lundysden6781 Жыл бұрын
I know two Native Americans once had this conversation about flint too!
@dongustafson2304
@dongustafson2304 2 ай бұрын
I'm kind of in love with the Spyderco K390 heat treatment.
@MichaelBrown-di6ks
@MichaelBrown-di6ks Жыл бұрын
3v is a bloody good steel for me, takes a fine edge and holds it well
@eriklorentzen6510
@eriklorentzen6510 Жыл бұрын
That 80crv2 life for me. Not a super steel, but axe makers of the 1930’s and 1940’s figured out that chrome vanadium steel was vastly superior to standard 1050 or 1080 steel for hard use edged tools. And my Terava Skrama 240 is 80crv2 and is my favorite backpacking/hiking/camping one tool option.
@JAB671
@JAB671 Жыл бұрын
This may sound strange but I'm betting knife guys will 'get it'. I was born in 1971 so I remember when high carbon steel blades - even on folders - was at least as common as stainless. I have never liked stainless - even good stainless - as much as a high carbon like 1095, etc. because I prefer the way high carbon steel blades feel on the whetstone, sharpening steel, ceramic rods, etc.when you sharpen/hone/strop them as well as when you use them to cut. I mean the sensation that you feel in your hand - it has 'soul', it feels 'live' (not alive just live) whereas stainless steels often just feel uninteresting even if the knife is sharp and cuts well. I don't get quite that sense of joy, of connection to the knife with a stainless. Does that make any sense, at all? I haven't really tried the super steels, though so maybe one of them does give that feeling. All that isn't to say that there aren't some stainless knives I like. I just think I would like them better in high carbon.
@jasondonley3533
@jasondonley3533 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for thoughtful commentary. Good points made!
@darinlogsdon3429
@darinlogsdon3429 Жыл бұрын
I still love the laminated COS S1 pro y’all recommended. Became my favorite over my esee 5 as soon as I used it.
@aaronweber8837
@aaronweber8837 Жыл бұрын
Great video guys love the outro music
@jeaneche697
@jeaneche697 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite small EDC blades was a small brisa necker sized US made my knife in 440c. Easy to sharpen held it's sharpness a surprisingly long time. Almost as long as my s35vn folders and didn't care if it was low grit or close to mirror polished. I miss that knife.
@TheMightybasstone
@TheMightybasstone Жыл бұрын
Buck knives model 119 and 124 are excellent and they are 420 hc ss.. Its in the heat treat!!
@BackyardDispatcher
@BackyardDispatcher Жыл бұрын
Some of the sweetest edits on youtube love the content !
@deez5396
@deez5396 Жыл бұрын
I always forget dbk is a “small” channel the whole production is insane and it honestly shocks me when I see that they don’t have millions of subs They’ll definitely get there though such amazing content and wonderful people with equally amazing personalities Glad I’ve been on this journey with them and it’s been great seeing them grow
@BackyardDispatcher
@BackyardDispatcher Жыл бұрын
@@deez5396 I feel that they are sometimes trapped in a smaller community and that KZfaq really has not exposed them for some reason to a wider audience, maybe YT hasn't picked up on the off subject videos that are more personal. All I know is, these two crazy guys are a couple of KZfaq gems and I wish them much success
@deez5396
@deez5396 Жыл бұрын
@@BackyardDispatcher yeah and maybe being a knife channel doesn’t really help but I think eventually the algorithm will work it’s magic
@BackyardDispatcher
@BackyardDispatcher Жыл бұрын
​@@deez5396 ... but those skits are f'n awesome my nephews love them and even non knife people like my mom said the show is top notch .
@Wideranger
@Wideranger Жыл бұрын
Another quality video. Well done!
@AllenCostello-kl8qs
@AllenCostello-kl8qs 27 күн бұрын
Actually informative! Nice job
@Zupfo
@Zupfo Жыл бұрын
Just a suggestion: Try the knives from UG-Tools. 3D-printed handle made of titanium and available in various super steels! Extremely light and robust
@LosRiji
@LosRiji Жыл бұрын
In dbk shorts they held it already. But No Video yet
@danieltomasjr.5871
@danieltomasjr.5871 Жыл бұрын
I want to see you both make your own knife with your own hands. Good content
@shanerichardson9568
@shanerichardson9568 Жыл бұрын
Through this video I was thinking that I have two M390 knives but I still love my Buck 110. Obviously the knives have completely different purposes but I'm never afraid to use my Buck knife 😊 Great video gentlemen!
@JT-cloverbottomt
@JT-cloverbottomt Жыл бұрын
You guys are great. I truly wish I could make my own blades, or at least be wealthy enough to afford some of the great blades you test. I appreciate you testing them and letting me see your experience with them. PS. Cancer sucks!
@jouzel8951
@jouzel8951 Жыл бұрын
Take care!
@svenvanderzwaag1012
@svenvanderzwaag1012 Жыл бұрын
You can definetely make your own blades and it doesnt have to be expensive! 14c28n steel is very cheap, but if you want the best you can also buy magnacut stock. You will want to diy an electric heattreating oven, an airquench setup and something to grind out the blades. A 2x72 belt grinder would be best. You can diy one or buy one. Best would be to also get a surface grinder attachment, to make it perfectly flat, but you can also wing it by hand. What you want to do is flatten a piece of bar stock and get all the scale of the stock until you have a flat clean piece. Trace out the blade and grind it out, then work on the bevels (easiest is to do this with a jig), leave about 0,02inch on the edge of the knife because otherwise this part will warp during heattreat, drill the holes for the handle pins, start sanding it till you have a nice finish, put the knife in stainless steel foil and put in the heatreat oven and follow the heattreatment instructions on the datasheet of the steel you bought, airplate quench the blades, clean up the scale on the knife, grind in you final bevels, handsand the blade, make the handle pieces, attach the handle pieces the blade with pins and epoxy/bolts etc. Clean up the handle material and sand/grind flush with the blade. Sharpen the knife. Thats about it. If you are smart about it you can make a proper setup for less than 1000dollars
@albsureinc23
@albsureinc23 Жыл бұрын
I do own a seal pup elite by SOG....I've had no problems splitting logs with it...budget Aus-8 but with good heat treatment....still a rock solid performer
@literaryartist1
@literaryartist1 Жыл бұрын
You guys raised so much good points that I've never thought of.
@thejohny1166
@thejohny1166 Жыл бұрын
Hey there, watched some old Videos about the A1 X and remembered, how much i miss your roleplay/comedy… Would love to see that again❤😂
@ch0cchip704
@ch0cchip704 Жыл бұрын
Thank you guys for a great video lot's of interesting steel character and technologys stuff
@konnorwerth4906
@konnorwerth4906 Жыл бұрын
Good video and reasoning. I would still love for you guys to test a good old fashion buck 119. its our most iconic American hunting knife. It has also been used in multiple american wars. Its known for there "bos" heat treatment using 420 hc.
@daemonharper3928
@daemonharper3928 Жыл бұрын
Great vid guys - 100% agree
@billandrews
@billandrews Жыл бұрын
Super steels are made of multiple materials with different MELTING POINTS. In a traditional melting pot, the lower and higher melting point materials would separate out preventing super steels from emerging from the material. The separate materials are ground down into a powder and completely mixed in with each other creating a hybrid mix which is then poured into a mold and compressed under tremendous pressure. As Gay-Lussac's Law states: Temperature moves with pressure. The pressure applied to the mixture is great enough to raise the temperature of the lowest melting point materials to their melting point, then quickly releasing the pressure. The material instantly hardens trapping the higher melting point materials in place within the now hard, but brittle metal piece. Now the part is heated to the point wherein the higher melting point materials melt within the piece and merge with the lower melting point materials creating a stronger metal matrix.
@justinw1765
@justinw1765 4 ай бұрын
I thought they were sprayed as a liquid and atomized into a powder with gases blown at/through it?
@Slaver87
@Slaver87 Жыл бұрын
Guys their is a pretty interesting knife brand from germany. They use 3d printed titanium handle. They are called UG Tools. Thank you for your pretty nice video!
@patrykogorek1607
@patrykogorek1607 Жыл бұрын
Very substantive talk that doesn't come out that often in an era of consumerism. Big plus that after so many years of videos about men's best jewelry You know what You're doing and have not denied the 'real world' context. What Micky said about the knives that costs a lot is spot on - better spent those dollars first on safety measures like knowledge & training, GPS, PLB, IFAK etc. And when You're into this sort of stuff, knife will come along the way for sure. Knife is no question a valuable tool, but at the end when any sort of SHTF happen the wielder is the most important tool
@TheTommyw77
@TheTommyw77 Жыл бұрын
Great video Bushcraft boys.
@jonnyboat2
@jonnyboat2 Жыл бұрын
Sinter technology. Making metal parts out of powdered metals. You deposit the mixed powdered metals into a mold, press it with a high pressure press, eject it from the mold and heat treat it. Or, use a laser to fuse thin individually applied layers of powdered metal by adding layer upon layer until the shape is complete.
@The4cp
@The4cp Жыл бұрын
Tops 1095 enough said. I'd like to see you guys do another over night camping trip I'm the late spring. Good weather but just an adventure outside of knife reviews.
@vagabond4576
@vagabond4576 Жыл бұрын
Its good you pointed out the Elmax with TRC. I been saying that. With a manufacturer or custom maker that specializes in certain steels. I would bet on that more than something that is the latest and greatest.
@johnvanpolanen3589
@johnvanpolanen3589 Жыл бұрын
Best DBK video to date !👍
@Airik1111bibles
@Airik1111bibles 7 ай бұрын
Love me some USA 🇺🇸 Tops 1095hc knives. Just bought their Tanimboca Puukko and can't wait to play with it. I've had their Brakimo for about 4 years now, and I have yet to get a single roll or damage to the edge. Plus, I just love the way their knives look ....I also love Becker and Ontario blades cause they are a blast too trick out and make them unique. I find that many expensive stainless blades are very useful, but they don't gain character over time. A knife that has good character after long use just looks freaking awesome.
@olivierbatiste6035
@olivierbatiste6035 Жыл бұрын
Very nice video, interesting topic and your friendship gives something special to your conversation. Supersteels are interesting, but like I have read once : there is no perfect steel, the ratio between edge retention, ease of sharpening, corrosion resistance and toughness will always be a dilemma for knives owners/users. As an example I'd talk about Mova58 or AN58 used by knifemakers in Spain for years (Nieto, Joker, J&V, etc...) : based on the metal composition it should'nt be a good steel for a bushcraft or survival knife, similar to 1.4116 basic steel, but on the field it's trustable and very useful.
@DutchBushcraftKnives
@DutchBushcraftKnives Жыл бұрын
I agree There is no perfect steel. Just like shoes everyone likes and fits something different
@desertchild.
@desertchild. Жыл бұрын
Since Crucible has already done a CPM in 154 and D2 I would love to see a CPM version of 1095 01 and A2
@coaltrain4423
@coaltrain4423 Жыл бұрын
Could you do a review and test on a good forged 52100 blade?I would appreciate that a lot.
@robertcachia6484
@robertcachia6484 Жыл бұрын
Best manscaped promotion I've seen yet 😅
@hammerstoneartifacts4986
@hammerstoneartifacts4986 Жыл бұрын
Hello from Ontario Canada. You guys are so charismatic and entertaining!! If you did a channel on toilet cleaners... l would still subscribe! Thank you for your insight into bushcraft . can you do a indeapth explanation on ferro rods? The right steal? The right rods? Break out all your knives....And show us the best sparks! Thank you so much for being so awesome! Great content! Fantastic energy!
@JiiJiitalo
@JiiJiitalo Жыл бұрын
Good thinking, these videos are great! Many people choose their knife based on the steel it is made of, and prefer super steels above all else. As you said, they have their advantages and their place, but traditional carbon steels should not be underestimated. If properly heat treated, they can be better than many super steels. And what I think is most important in all tools, including knives: geometry. The most important thing is how it fits in the hand and how pleasant it is to use. In knives, this means not only the handle but also the blade, and its profile.
@LionAstrology
@LionAstrology Жыл бұрын
Thanks for another video DBK
BEST VALUE KNIFE 2022 | When you only can buy ONE!
17:21
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 61 М.
THIS Steel will Change Knives FOREVER.... | CPM Magnacut Super steel
19:24
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 175 М.
Пранк пошел не по плану…🥲
00:59
Саша Квашеная
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Stay on your way 🛤️✨
00:34
A4
Рет қаралды 23 МЛН
Damascus vs. Super Steels - Testing a Dozen Different Damascus Steels!
50:32
Best budget knife 2022!? We found out for you!
14:44
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 99 М.
Axe easily chops through STEEL and STONE.. Tops Hammerhawk!
15:00
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 73 М.
What Is The Best Knife Steel?
6:09
Blade HQ
Рет қаралды 67 М.
How This $300 knife FAILED... and then BLEW US AWAY!! | TOPS EL CHETE
27:21
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 127 М.
JOE X DESTROYED our $300.000 Knife Project....
25:00
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 101 М.
S90V is Better Than Your Favorite Super Steel -Steel Snobs S90V
10:12
Ultimate Knife Buying Guide | Beginners to Advanced
19:42
Dutch Bushcraft Knives
Рет қаралды 66 М.
Knife School: Ep 3: Demystifying Steels Through Abusive Testing
1:16:50
Девушка ограбила мажора, но…😳
1:00
Trailer Film
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
KARMA AT SCHOOL 🏫 Stop time
0:32
dednahype
Рет қаралды 39 МЛН
НРАВИТСЯ ЭТОТ ФОРМАТ??
0:37
МЯТНАЯ ФАНТА
Рет қаралды 8 МЛН