FlipperFla
Active member
Considering purchasing an ESEE3 what are the pros and cons of a plain vs a serrated blade for a survival knife? And the different functions of a survival vs a camping knife.
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Thanks for the response, great article. I am leaning towards serrated, being around a water environment and a lot of our adventures are by boat or kayak, cutting line from a fouled prop for example. In your trips to the Glades, did you do the Wilderness Waterway? A great book about the Glades in the early days is Killing Mr. Watson. I use it as a reference for the locations of the early homesteads, mark them on the GPS and visit them. When we stopped at the Watson Place you could feel the evil “vibe”, my wife wouldnt even get out of the skiff! Thanks again.I've spent a lot of time in the woods and a quality knife is extremely important to me. But, what I would always come down to with advice is personal preference. For me, I think a non-serrated works best. I prefer a fixed blade around 4 to 5 inches in length, flat ground, full tang, and nothing much more than 1/8th inch thick. I carry an axe or saw for the big stuff.
Here is an article I wrote and some of the thoughts about the subject of the perfect knife: http://sportingclassicsdaily.com/perfect-guide-knife/. I hope it helps.
cutting line from a fouled prop for example
Thanks for the info. The right tool for the right job says it all.Classic case of "get the right tool for the job".
For woodcraft or hunting use, I'd prefer no serrations. There are too many operations where I want to use the base of the blade for control, and the serrations would be in the way. On the other hand, if I was working on a boat, I'd wanted a single-hand opening serrated blade, preferably with a marlin spike on the backside. Some boats even insist on a fixed serrated blade kept outside the clothing whenever on-deck.
Supposedly the reason all the original "survival knives" issued to pilots had serrations was for sawing through aluminum fuselage, and the type of serration seen on Vietnam-vintage pilot's knives sort of bears that out. Definitely not the knife I'd choose for other work, though.
The upside is that good knives don't have to be expensive. A $20-$30 Mora will do everything you need from a woodcraft or basic hiker's survival knife perspective.