Receiving and unpacking knives is
one of my favorite activities.
I just got two from Columbia
River Knife and Tool and they are both winners.
The first knife is the Razelcliffe, designed by Jon Graham and the
other, the Kith, designed by Ken Steigerwalt.
The top is the Razelcliffe and the bottom the Kith. |
The Kith is a locking folder with a 3-inch blade ground from 8CR13MoV stainless steel. It is a good knife steel, especially for a working knife. Compared to D2 (you'll see why later), D2 tends to have more edge retention and hardness than 8Cr13MoV but is more expensive and less corrosion resistant.
The Kith utilizes a front lock
set in the 3.75-inch glass-reinforced nylon handle. It is relatively lightweight at 2.3 ounces; I
get mail heavier than that. I like the
handle, but the contrast in the black handle is not from pigmentation but
surface geometry.
Unfortunately, the gray handle spots are just different reflectivity
It's a good length for many basic jobs at a campsite, fishing, in the office, or preparing the yard for winter. The Kith has an MSRP of $40. You can't go wrong at that price for a working knife.
Years ago, I had a Razel with a
stag handle from CRKT. I last saw it in
the pocket of an Australian heading home to their anti-knife culture. I hope he made it. It was a very cool knife.
The Razelcliffe, let me suggest it would make a very icey club knife. |
The G-10 handle is 3.25 inches
long, and the knife weighs 3.3 ounces.
The MSRP is $48, a reasonable price for a step up in cool factors.
I've always thought CRKT over-engineers their knives. You get a lot of knife for a reasonable price. That’s invaluable in a world where you pay for a name.