The Fairbairn Sykes Fighting Knives
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Kamaitachi

2/18/2023

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The Dynamics of Cutting: 
For over forty five years I have been experimenting and training with many types of fighting knives.  Just when you think you know everything there is to know about a subject something new comes up.  That’s how it was for me with blade geometry and the dynamics of cutting.  My test-cutting mediums are not very exotic.  They consist of simple cardboard tubes, hollow tubes formed by loosely rolling two sheets of newspaper, or foam swimming pool noodles. 
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One night at our dojo I spent time working flow drills with a new knife from Laci Szabo called the Kamaitachi.  This knife is like a kerambit on steroids or some African inspired cutter.  When I emailed Laci about how he intended for this knife to be used he replied, “it is the simplest of all of my knives to use.”  Sorry Laci, but that didn’t answer my  question.  Because of its unusual hooked shape I dismissed the Kamaitachi as a stabbing weapon and concluded that it would only be suitable for ripping and tearing actions.  Despite this I decided to try some experimental thrusts with it.  The stabbing qualities of the Kamaitachi really impressed me!  I thought that the offset point would create an undesirable torquing effect upon impact but it didn’t seem to.  When used for thrusting it works best if it is held in what I call a modified reverse grip.  In fact for any technique the kamaitachi seems more comfortable when held this way.

A bigger surprise awaited me when I tried slashing with the Kamaitachi. It performed poorly.  This was a disappointment considering its talon-like curvature.  Based on this one practice session I dismissed it as a cutting weapon. Later I decided that maybe the Kamaitachi and I needed more time together.  There is an old saying that, “familiarity breeds contempt,” not so when it comes to weapons.  In this case familiarity proved to be what I needed to adapt to the Kamaitachi’s quirks.  By applying a whole new blade approach-angle I finally achieved the results I was looking for and discovered a new level of cutting efficiency with the Kamaitachi.

Laci’s stated design philosophy is that a knife’s ergonomics ought to be tailored to the way a human being moves, not the other way around.  That makes sense to me.  I feel like I have also figured out which way to move my body to keep the Kamaitachi happy. The top knife is the exotic Szabo kamaitachi.


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Cutting practice in the dojo. Making a clean cut on a free-standing cardboard wrapping paper tube. If the cut is not perfect the tube will just fly across the floor. It is not a matter of power or speed, just the precise angle that the blade intersects the cutting medium. This knife is a real chopper made by a man in Canada. Photo of the knife is below.
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Holy Crap

2/18/2023

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I have been trying to login for three days, emailed customer support, tried resetting my password and using a unusually large number of cuss words. I finally figured out the right combination. I have been working on volume three of my books on Fairbairn-Sykes knives. It is focused on 2nd and 3rd patterns and OSS stiletto. Volume 2 is about ready to go to print with a slight delay. what this has made me realize is the breadth and depth of my collection. This is good for you the readed but terrible for my checking account. Right now I owe a friend for a dagger and sales of my knives have been very lethargic. If you see something on here i have for sale, ask me. Maybe I can do better on price. NONE of the F-S are for sale or the agents knives. So please do not ask. 

Anyway I am glad to be able to login again and will post more later. I have a good friend who I am going to begin teaching knife defense. It has been a long time since I taught because of the "plandemic." It ought to be fun to teach again. He wants an alternative to using a handgun for defense. Today legal gunowners are under tremendous attack from the government. Always have a "plan B." 

​Here is one of my original O.S.S. daggers. It belonged to an agent serving in the CBI theater or combat.
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This is the knife I need to pay off. It is a Paisley (yes Ron I know he didn't exist). The person I am buying it from bought it in a Trade Fair in London in the 1990s. It is unique in several ways that confound me. It has "WSC" stamps on the blade and "30946" on the grip, along with "008" on the side edge of the ricasso. The WSC is not for Wilkinson Sword, but then maybe it is. I don't know what to say about this knife. It is a very nicely converted 1903 Lee-Metford bayonet. ​
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    Author:

    You can find out more about me on the "Stories" pages. My hobbies have included training in Japanese martial arts, including Kenjutsu, many forms of knife fighting, long range rifles and tactical firearms. I have written several self published books on muzzle-loading firearms, knife-fighting and textbooks on gas engines and compressors. I am working diligently on my 400+ page F-S book.

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