The first time I ever seen one of these knives is when a fellow forum member posted one in the for sale section. Being a lifelong knife collector and knife maker it's pretty hard to come up with something I haven't seen,The Yakut is from Siberia, its origin is lost in antiquity, the blade geometry is genius. I was fascinated by this funny looking knife and just had to build one. The blade is single bevel, it is convex ground on one side and flat ground on the side with the fuller. It is sharpened on the flat side only, holding the blade flat to the stone. After spending some time on Google getting educated on the finer points of the Yakut,
this is what I came up with. The traditional Yakut handle is made from Birch wood and reindeer horn, I was fresh out of Birch and reindeer so I used a cool piece of palmated whitetail horn , the blade is forged from a USA made file. Blade is 3 1/2 inches long, the bolster is pewter.
In conclusion, This knife is got to be the easiest knife there is to get sharp, just hold it flat to the stone,It will get scary and I mean scary sharp with very little effort. I tested the bade on a piece of oak firewood and heavy cardboard and after much abuse it would still pop hair.I really like this knife and am looking forward to trying it out on some east Texas hogs and whitetail this fall. Special thanks to brother Wiksmo for posting his knife for sale, it gave me the inspiration to build one
In conclusion, This knife is got to be the easiest knife there is to get sharp, just hold it flat to the stone,It will get scary and I mean scary sharp with very little effort. I tested the bade on a piece of oak firewood and heavy cardboard and after much abuse it would still pop hair.I really like this knife and am looking forward to trying it out on some east Texas hogs and whitetail this fall. Special thanks to brother Wiksmo for posting his knife for sale, it gave me the inspiration to build one
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