I’m this video, I am showcasing a powerful tool used commonly by fire/rescue personnel. It also makes for an excellent all purpose tomahawk. #ontariospecplus #fireandrescue #tomahawks www.bladehq.com/item--Ontario...
I'd choose that over a hatchet as a primary bush tool. You can use this like a machete to some degree, although you'd probably get tired faster. It chops no problem and probably splits small firewood well enough. You can dig fire pits, waste pits etc with the spike. If you need a stationary blade and two hands, hammer the spike into a log with the blade up. This could easily substitute for a big belt knife, hatchet or both.
Great video! One of the few drawbacks to most fighting axes/tomahawks is the beard. When you sink the head into any material, it's the beard that hooks in and makes it difficult to get out of the material so you can deliver a second strike. This axe solves that by not having a beard.....and it's not that expensive.....remarkable find!
These are awesome!! I bought mine 14 years ago. Chopped down many tree limbs and even a tree. I understand Airforce 1 has one Inside in case of an emergency. Indestructible.
They still have some but the numbers over time have dwindled probably based on sales. My favorite is one of the first ones they stopped first the Sp4..
org that type design is from ww2 for use in gliders and bombers the designed varied over the years. i have an org 1 with the handle insulated so it could cut live wires and to pry open the hatch on the ball turrets ect..
Oh come on!!! We all know you threw it like 300 times before it stuck twice! Haha!! I was rather unlucky as I purchased mine after I left the service. And it is okay. You said it best it is really designed for emergency situations. We had one kinda similar on or flight SIT medivac Backhawks. I actually believe the one we had on ours was rusted to the fuselage. This is the perfect tool for a Bugout bag for all you weird anti government types. But also works well to just keep in a vehicle.