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blade material choice
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Topic: blade material choice (Read 6202 times)
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banoch
Guest
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #15 on:
October 14, 2009, 12:18:30 am »
The problem is that being new to all of this I have absolutly nothing of interest to trade except for a little $.
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leapingbare
Member
Posts: 2,028
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #16 on:
October 14, 2009, 12:21:07 am »
I think stone knifes were carried for self defense as a last resort.. it would be much more practical to use blades and flacks for cutting and carving.. sure you can gut a deer with a well made stone knife.. but its much easier to do it with a flack off a blade core. just my 2 cents.
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Mililani Hawaii
Jaeger
Member
Posts: 238
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #17 on:
October 14, 2009, 06:35:54 am »
a flake is as sharp as it ever will get to retouch it just dulls it ,or so it sayes in waldorfs book.
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sailordad
Member
Posts: 5,045
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #18 on:
October 14, 2009, 07:09:53 pm »
ive got scars on two of my fingerprint pads from flakes
damn near cut both of them right of the finger
happened in less than a blink of an eye too
they cut soo clean ya can bleed for two days before it quits,then ya bump it and it starts all over again with the bleeding
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i always wanted a harley,untill it became the "thing to ride"
i ride because i love to,not to be part of the crowd
mullet
Global Moderator
Member
Posts: 22,911
Eddie Parker
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #19 on:
October 14, 2009, 09:35:54 pm »
Brian Melton knocked off a flake of that Florida Chert, Hillbilly once called concrete. And then commenced to skinning a boar hog with no trouble at all. Anybody that has experiance skinning a wild hog knows how you have to keep resharpening your knife.
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Lakeland, Florida
If you have to pull the trigger, is it really archery?
Bill Skinner
Member
Posts: 384
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #20 on:
October 14, 2009, 09:53:09 pm »
Pedernales or flint. I agree with Leapingbear, they carried a stone knife in case they needed to cut something. If they expected to cut something, they carried flakes or spalls or something they could get flakes from. Bill
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banoch
Guest
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #21 on:
October 15, 2009, 12:30:31 am »
OK, I found some rhyolite but the guy says that it is "mid grade" What does this mean other than it is not high or low grade? He is asking $2 lb.
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Hillbilly
Member
Posts: 8,248
I like tater tots.
Re: blade material choice
«
Reply #22 on:
October 15, 2009, 11:31:05 am »
Banoch, where is the rhyolite from? In NC, it ranges from a very good grade comparable in knappability to raw chert to a grainy, granite-like rock that's almost unknappable. The best stuff is green or gray.
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Smoky Mountains, NC
NeolithicHillbilly@gmail.com
Progress might have been all right once but it's gone on for far too long.
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blade material choice