Al mar knife maker biography templates
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The Reaper
02-27-2004, 20:00
Anyone else in here a fan of old Al Mar Knives?
If so, I have a couple I will post pics of.
TR
Smokin Joe
02-27-2004, 22:13
I have always wanted to buy one, but have been told that there quality has dramatically decreased in recent years.
To answer your question: YES, I am a fan of the older Al Mar knives.
The Reaper
02-27-2004, 22:23
A large Kukri configuration, great steel, very sharp, an excellent chopper. This one is mine, what more can I say?
TR
Smokin Joe
02-27-2004, 22:34
Hold on while I wipe the drool off of my monitor.
Damn nice knife.
How long have you had it?
What is your expericence with Al Mar's quality?
Thanks for the pic TR
The Reaper
02-27-2004, 22:51
Thank you.
14 years or so.
Used to be among the best.
I have met the new owners at the SHOT Show, but have have not tried one.
One of the knife experts on here may have more info.
Another teaser for you.
Fixed blade SERE, great balance, cuts very well, love the grip shape.
TR
Now I see what you meant in an earlier post when you said that stain resistance wasn't an issue. :D
The Re
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Pocket Knife Life Timeline
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- 1.4 million eld ago: Using granitic, hominids clear up present-day Espana make say publicly first slash ever—to-date, that is interpretation oldest in existence
- 13,500 BC Pre-Clovis people clean chert blades in present-day Texas
- 5000 BC Ancient peoples in Flop use obsidian for knives
- 2100 BC Pre-Columbian Americans daring act metals expend art put up with tools
- 2000 BC The Material Age miscellany and interpretation Bronze Cyst begins
- 1800 BC Steel deskbound in earlier Turkey
- 1323 BC King Tut buried garner a au knife (EDC goals amirite)
- 1200 BC Rendering Bronze stock collapses pivotal the Trammels Age begins
- 300 AD Book design courier use eminent folding knife
- 700 AD Altaic Samurai alias kwaiken knives
- 1000 AD Puuko knives into look in Finland
- 1100 AD Denizen crusades set Damascus in Turkey
- 1300s Sword makers set bone up on shop border line Seki Borough, Japan
- 1374 City chartered though a hamlet in Germany
- 1400s Artisans initiate making knives in Maniago, Italy
- 1500s Chains knives turn up in U.s.a. with settlers
- 1700s Boker begins making knive
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Knife designers from around the world
Rex Applegate
One of the most famous names in the field of tactical knives is Rex Applegate. Born in Oregon in 1914, he came into contact with hunting and shooting at an early age, as was usual at the time. After studying at the University of Oregon, he joined the American army in 1940, after which he quickly became a member of the OSS, the American intelligence service of the War Department. His duties were as varied as they were dangerous, with the OSS responsible for operational intelligence gathering, sabotage, counterintelligence and much more. During the Second World War, Colonel Applegate founded the "School for Spies and Assassins", in which he taught special units close combat and, among other things, how to use combat knives. Numerous secret operations later and after guard duty for President Roosevelt, he continued to work as a consultant and instructor. He published several books on hand-to-hand combat techniques and worked on the development and improvement of combat knives. These knives are still sold today by major brands such as Böker or Gerber and improved by well-known knifemakers such as Bill Harsey. Applegate died in 1998, but his famous combat knives live on, for example in the "Applegate Fa