- Joined
- Mar 25, 2018
- Messages
- 7
PRICE: $2000.00 (more pics available upon request)
NEW!!!! POHAN LEU 3 7/8" HAMACHI with ZIRCONIUM BOLSTER, ZIRCU-TI SCALE, ZIRCU-TI FLOATING SPACER AND ZIRCU-TI CLIP
BOOMERANG DAMASCUS BLADE, BLUE ANODIZED TITANIUM HARDWARE, TANTO TIP
BLASTED/TUMBER LINER AND LOCKSIDE
FULL custom, I waited 18 months to get this knife and paid $2200.00 (receipt available)
Product Details
Blade Length 3 7/8"
Overall Length 9.5
Closed Length 5.5
Weight (oz) 8.2
Source NEW
Knife Type Tip Up Carry, Tip Up Clip
Blade Details Tanto
Other Details Tactical
NO RETURNS AS THIS IS A BRAND NEW KNIFE
About the Maker
Leu, Pohan
For as long as I can remember, I have loved knives and anything that my mother found dangerous! I have been making knives part-time since 2003. When I first started out, I had minimal tools to use including a 4"x36" belt sander my wife (then girlfriend) bought me for wood working. Prior to my first belt sander, I used an angle grinder which i eventually realized, didn't work for me. I started heat treating knives in an open air coal forge, not really understanding what was involved in heat-treating the Air-Hardening tool steel I currently use today. The knives came out hard, but heat-treated unevenly. I decided more than a year later to invest in an electric kiln and I have never looked back. I do all my heat-treating, cutting and shaping of the steel. Every blade is sharpened to beyond what is actually necessary as a cutting tool.
NEW!!!! POHAN LEU 3 7/8" HAMACHI with ZIRCONIUM BOLSTER, ZIRCU-TI SCALE, ZIRCU-TI FLOATING SPACER AND ZIRCU-TI CLIP
BOOMERANG DAMASCUS BLADE, BLUE ANODIZED TITANIUM HARDWARE, TANTO TIP
BLASTED/TUMBER LINER AND LOCKSIDE
FULL custom, I waited 18 months to get this knife and paid $2200.00 (receipt available)
Product Details
Blade Length 3 7/8"
Overall Length 9.5
Closed Length 5.5
Weight (oz) 8.2
Source NEW
Knife Type Tip Up Carry, Tip Up Clip
Blade Details Tanto
Other Details Tactical
NO RETURNS AS THIS IS A BRAND NEW KNIFE
About the Maker
Leu, Pohan
For as long as I can remember, I have loved knives and anything that my mother found dangerous! I have been making knives part-time since 2003. When I first started out, I had minimal tools to use including a 4"x36" belt sander my wife (then girlfriend) bought me for wood working. Prior to my first belt sander, I used an angle grinder which i eventually realized, didn't work for me. I started heat treating knives in an open air coal forge, not really understanding what was involved in heat-treating the Air-Hardening tool steel I currently use today. The knives came out hard, but heat-treated unevenly. I decided more than a year later to invest in an electric kiln and I have never looked back. I do all my heat-treating, cutting and shaping of the steel. Every blade is sharpened to beyond what is actually necessary as a cutting tool.