



Does anyone else have one of these? If so, what are your experiences with the "Besh-Wedge" blade?

No, I want to sharpen the single edge of the bevel grind. (One side only). This should maintain the edge.orvet wrote:Do you mean sharpen the back side of the chisel grind? I would avoid that, that will reduce the sharpness of the edge.
A chisel grind is one of the sharpest edges you can get. I love chisel grind knives and use them in my shop for detail work and cutting nice clean lines.
My personal opinion about carrying a knife for self defense: not a good idea unless you are an accomplished martial artist with edged weapons! Even the "winner" of a knife fight will usually require numerous stitches.
If I am going somewhere I feel I will need to defend myself or my family, my first inclination is not to go. What can be as important enough to risks one's life or family members life? If for some reason I cannot imagine I must still go to this dangerous place, I would carry a gun not a knife.
Just my opinion.
Have you ridden the MAX lately? Walked the streets of Portland while the "Hate America First" crowd protests? I feel safer visiting Tijuana, BCN MX than I do walking the streets of the Tenderloin District of San Francisco or the Sunset Strip of Los Angeles.orvet wrote:Do you mean sharpen the back side of the chisel grind? I would avoid that, that will reduce the sharpness of the edge.
A chisel grind is one of the sharpest edges you can get. I love chisel grind knives and use them in my shop for detail work and cutting nice clean lines.
If I am going somewhere I feel I will need to defend myself or my family, my first inclination is not to go. What can be as important enough to risks one's life or family members life? If for some reason I cannot imagine I must still go to this dangerous place, I would carry a gun not a knife.
Just my opinion.
I agree. I avoid some of the idiots in metropolitan areas. Sometimes it can't be done. About two years ago, I boarded a bus along 82nd' Avenue in Portland, OR I was accosted by the raving lunacy of a demented homeless man. I did everything I could to de-escalate the situation. The bus driver quickly expelled the fool. I feared that I would have to defend my life from this man because he was obviously mentally unstable and a danger to other citizens outside of myself. I'll confess, I was carrying an 11" long, automatic American-made, Picklock Stiletto with a 1095 Carbon Steel bayonet blade.QTCut5 wrote:Even more foolish than travelling through dangerous territory unarmed is travelling through dangerous territory with a false sense of security by carrying an inadequate / ineffective means of self-defense. If you know you're going into a potentially life-threatening situation, I would definitely NOT recommend the Boker Besh-Wedge as a first (or even third) line of defense.
First: Escape / Run Away
Second: Negotiate
Third: Defend / Fight Back
Final: Use whatever means necessary to survive and/or eliminate the threat
Al Mar knives has an acronym for their tactical / combat knives designed specifically for exactly that purpose: SERE, which stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape
~Q~
You are spot on, that is the proper way to maintain a chisel grind. And when maintain that way that are really sharp!Captain O wrote: No, I want to sharpen the single edge of the bevel grind. (One side only). This should maintain the edge.
I'm not that old and crippled, and plan to stay as spry as possible for a number of years to come. Trust me, the entire city is turning into krap.orvet wrote:You are spot on, that is the proper way to maintain a chisel grind. And when maintain that way that are really sharp!Captain O wrote: No, I want to sharpen the single edge of the bevel grind. (One side only). This should maintain the edge.
I worked on 82nd in Portland, 30 years ago it was a great middle income area, at least on the southern end around Clackamas Town Center. I also worked in the old downtown area of Milwaukee, one block off of 82nd. I would go for walks on my lunch and not think twice about it, not anymore.
Two or three years ago my wife and I were driving somewhere around 82nd and Division looking for a store she wanted to go to. That area had changed dramatically since the last time I'd been there, probably 30 years ago. I don't know of any place in Portland on the east side of the Willamette River where I would consider taking Tri Met or the Max!
I also worked a couple places on NE. Union Ave. in Portland, before they renamed it MLK Blvd. One place was on the corner of NE Couch & Union, one block from the Burnside Bridge. Between the homeless campers, junkies, winos and hookers who never knew you were what you would find in the parking lot when you came to work and if they were dead or alive. I worked a couple miles north of the Burnside Bridge on what is now MLK Blvd, that is even more interesting.
I have only written Tri Met a couple times, when an ice storm covered the city and I couldn't get home, and I have never ridden Max, and never intend to.![]()
Good luck with public transportation up there!
I'm too old and crippled to rely on a knife for protection, too many ways for things to go sideways.
.40 caliber or larger for me, TYVM!