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bigant
09-10-2008, 15:21
hey all first post here so be gentle lol :) basicly was lookin on flebay for a new knife got about 50 quid to spend and was looking at the build your own blanks then i spotted this..
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/NEW-MORA-BUSHCRAFT-AXE-KNIFE-GIFT-SET_W0QQitemZ250305110012QQcmd ZViewItem?hash=item25030511001 2&_trkparms=72%3A1298|39%3A1|66% 3A2|65%3A12|240%3A1318&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14

just wondering if anyones had any experance of this plasticy axe it looks intresting for part of my landrovers kit.
cheers Ant.

mick miller
09-10-2008, 15:30
I'm no expert but I'd say that pound for pound you'd do better with a Mora knife for around £8.50 and then spend an extra fiver to get a gransfors small forest axe or similar. Welcome to BCUK by the way...

EDIT: Do you actually need an axe? Maybe a folding saw might be more practical?

stickbow
09-10-2008, 15:33
Hi There
I have several Mora knives and the are fantastic quality so I guess the axe will be the same.
I would definatly go for it.

"Have fun shoot a stick"

bigant
09-10-2008, 16:11
wow thanks for the fast reply :) i allready have a folding saw and want to do some spoon making and things i had a nice mora knife but its seen better days :( a few years of no use has killed it *problems stoped me goin out an things* so gettin back into it all again :)

Simon H
09-10-2008, 17:18
I think I'd give that a miss. No idea about the quality but if you break the plastic helve you're finished, whereas if you you buy a more traditional wooden helved axe you can at least repair it yourself.

mick miller
09-10-2008, 17:20
That's what I was thinking, I'm not particularly attracted to the knife either, possibly a better buy would be the clipper or standard Mora shape.

saddle_tramp
09-10-2008, 18:42
I think the knife in the set is a mora 2000, theres a review on them somewhere on this site. im not an axe user so cant really comment whether thats good or bad. . .

DoctorSpoon
09-10-2008, 18:54
If you're wanting to carve spoons that doesn't look like what you want! The best knives for spoon carving are the Frosts Mora 106 (longer blade, better when you know what you're doing) or 120 (shorter blade - safer for beginners). For a more general purpose knife that you can still carve with get a Frosts Mora Clipper. All cost no more than a tenner.

For a fairly general purpose axe you can't go far wrong with a Gransfors Wildlife Hatchet - costs about £45 I think. There's a special spoon Gransfors carving axe, but they cost about £75. Alternatively go down your local car boot sale and look out an old Kent pattern axe. They tend to cost around a fiver and do a fine job!

Nicola

Paganwolf
09-10-2008, 19:26
Ive seen one of these in the flesh and as a small pack axe they are remarkably well balanced, also the axe head has a tang on it and goes into the handle giging the whole thing more durability, as has been said going by the quality of the knives this seems to follow in the footsteps and if your just using it as a pack axe while traveling where weight is of a premium they aint bad for the money as far as i could see.

Buckshot
09-10-2008, 21:07
. Alternatively go down your local car boot sale and look out an old Kent pattern axe.

Nicola

What's a kent pattern axe Nicola?
Any pictures?

Mark

maddave
09-10-2008, 21:15
What's a kent pattern axe Nicola?
Any pictures?

Mark


http://www.horsesoldier.com/catalog/r14358.JPEG


:)

DoctorSpoon
09-10-2008, 21:28
Robin's a little addicted to them ... here's a few:
http://i227.photobucket.com/albums/dd10/design-doctor/knife/kent-pattern.jpg
Nicola

bikething
09-10-2008, 21:34
http://www.horsesoldier.com/catalog/r14358.JPEG

:)So it's an axe with no handle then? :p

ForgeCorvus
09-10-2008, 22:10
I've always thought of Kent patterns looking like crinolline* dresses
I love 'em


*Yes, I know this isn't spelt correctly. No, my spell checker doesn't know how either .....Partial Dyslexic and Proud :D

The Cumbrian
09-10-2008, 23:26
I've got something similar ( see: http://www.bushcraftuk.com/forum/showthread.php?t=34234, second pic down ), and I really like it. I won't be able to chop any trees down with it, but it's light, has a knife in the handle and works really well when used for chopping sticks for my Fire Spout Mini ( shown ) or Woodgas stove.

Cheers, Michael.

LazySod
09-10-2008, 23:42
Funnily enough, I have a cheapo version of that axe (a lot shorter, and yellow to boot) and thats where i store my Mora in transit.

Landy_Dom
10-10-2008, 12:45
I got one of those in my shed - could do with a clean up - but are they any good?? - not tried using it - I usually use my sandvik one.

EdS
10-10-2008, 13:18
got an Elwell and a Morris one of them both 40+ years old.

Buckshot
10-10-2008, 13:41
Ah one of those!
Thanks Dave and Nicola

Mark

Spikey DaPikey
10-10-2008, 14:31
http://img.auctiva.com/imgdata/9/0/4/2/9/7/webimg/153837831_o.jpg

mortalmerlin
10-10-2008, 14:31
hey all first post here so be gentle lol :) basicly was lookin on flebay for a new knife got about 50 quid to spend and was looking at the build your own blanks then i spotted this..

just wondering if anyones had any experance of this plasticy axe it looks intresting for part of my landrovers kit.
cheers Ant.

For only 50 GBP you can have a new mora and gransfors axe from woodlore.

rik_uk3
10-10-2008, 22:09
I've got a few Mora, and as said they are great, I tend to use a Laplander saw or a £4.99 bow saw from Wilkinsons. Although I'm not really an axe user, I do have Gransfors and the quality is stunning. I'm looking at folding bow saw options just now to be honest.

Still Waters
10-10-2008, 22:33
Heres a kent patt axe i auctioned a while ago on another forum

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v143/paradox1001/tundra026.jpg

I would love to have a play with that mora axe as it cant be any worse than the gerber one i tried

Does anyone have any links to those hatchets with the knife in the handle?

Tengu
10-10-2008, 22:35
It seems a dumb idea to me.

But if the heads from the Swedish firm...can it be taken off and given a proper handle??

Still Waters
10-10-2008, 23:14
Not in the traditional sense tengu