Frag Out! Magazine
Issue link: https://fragout.uberflip.com/i/642978
support you finger at the ramp of the upper hilt). The hand is narrow, but relatively thick, and additionally it has been pleasantly profiled – it is thicker in the plac- es where a middle part of the hand is supported, and narrower in the points where aligns an index and little finger. An undercut beneath a guard is also a great ad- vantage. The shape of the handle ensures a certain grip despite a fact that the polished micarta seems to be slippery. Nevertheless, while using the knife I have noticed that its materials have rubbed off easily – in certain places the straps have matted and slightly worn off. The hand is precisely adjusted, I have not found any aperture between the elements, although while moving with my finger across the layers, I could find connections under the tang, G10 and micarta. TEST Up till now I have dealt mainly with utility knives, from time to time with the fighters, that is balisongs (aka butterfly knives). However none of them has given me an opportunity to conduct one of the cult tests which consist in piercing a refrigerator or tires, and are performed using the tactical knives without any specific reason. The RTK from Arthur has been the first blade to which, for the purposes of the review, I have funded such a fun, although it has not been my intention from a very beginning. As the knife, even at the first glance, it has made an impression of a quite useful tool (its entire length is 28cm, in that the cutting edge measures 14.5 cm) which has served me as every other knife to the for- est. It has planned sticks, chopped little tree branches, and from time to time fractured thick pieces of wood. www.fragoutmag.com