Luv my SOG Voodoo Hawk. Small, light, sharp, solid. Used for camp stuff/firewood processing, whitling spoons, limbing smaller branches of felled trees. Easy for my kids to wield. Can use as a pickaroon. Don't throw it, did have to tighten bolts once after a lot of heavy use. Was a lot cheaper when I bought it.
I love them all I personally carry a cold steel Spike tomahawk everywhere I go and as a backup I have a song I can tell you from experience yes as a volunteer firefighter you can tear apart a car take out windows and other things and in the woods the spots are incredibly handy to pick up logs turn over rocks and a move the logs from one place to your campsite for a really good fire please make more videos with the tomahawks love your videos
I’ve never been one for “strict adherence” to one tool, type, method, application, etc. Yeah, more often than not a machete “does it all” for me but that particularly boils down to just clearing things quickly or amassing “fire fuel”. Anything more? Chainsaw. But yeah, tomahawks are fun and they only get more elaborate and some of what I’ve seen has made me seriously reconsider incorporating one. The breaching stuff can certainly be handy as part of an emergency kit for sure. Aside from that, despite the Hogue not being full tang the lightweight nature and ease of access/use is incredibly appealing. Especially for hiking and self-defense in a pinch.
I believe that the bone hawk from bone tactical should also be included on this list because of its robust comstruction that is made of a 3/8 in. steel (thicker than most tomahawks); that has a hardness of 58 HRC on the blade, spike, and crobar; and has 40 HRC hardness on the handle itself. Also, the blade can be sharpenable on the field.
I think these guys are sticking to stuff they sell .. ( i assume) bone tactical is only sold from the bone tactical website.. also $500- $ 800 for a hawk puts it into rather niche category...
Crkt rune is awesome for its size and is a good thrower. Therefore i ordered the kangee t hawk...i am a bit disapointed because according to you it is not so good of a thrower
The trench hawk is not too great. I had it for years. It cannot chop due to the polypropylene handle wobbling, and it is a bit too heavy for some throwers. The steel is not the greatest either, you get what you pay for. Cold Steel focuses on rugged and affordable.
@@evgenybelilovskiy1205 I've never had a wobble problem with mine. As long as you aren't trying to take down a huge tree you should be fine. Also, the spike is oddly good for weeding out large thistle taproots and busting up ice buildup where my gutter leaks in the winter. But, I guess we all have our own preferences.
the spyderco comes with an awesome mask but I gotta say it handles worse than any other hatchet I’ve ever used. It’s an absolutely terrible woodworking tool.