Columbia River Knife and Tool’s 2012 Ringed Razel Chisel and Bellied Razor Edge Blade

March 6th, 2010

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Columbia River Knife and Tool's 2012 Ringed Razel Chisel and Bellied Razor Edge Blade
 
Manufacturer: Columbia River Knife and Tool
Customer Rating:
 
List Price: $109.99
Sale Price: $65.37
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Product Description

Columbia River Razel Knives Ringed, The Ringed Razel has cutting edges of 1.125" and 3.0". The handle terminates in a ring for the little finger. You can use this tool in the wettest, slickest conditions without fear of losing your grip. Features: - Handle: Micarta - Blade: 9Cr18MoV - Blade Finish: Satin - Blade Style: No Tip - Edge Style: Plain Specifications: - Blade: Length: 3.0" - Thickness: 0.18" - Steel: 9Cr18MoV, 58-60 HRC - Open: Overall length: 7.50" - Weight: 5.5 oz., Mfg No: 2012, Manufacturer: Columbia River

Columbia River Knife and Tool's 2012 Ringed Razel Chisel and Bellied Razor Edge Blade Details

  • Fixed blade
  • Utility knife
  • 9Cr18MoV stainless steel
  • Hand contoured Micarta handle
  • Kydex sheath

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Customer Reviews For Columbia River Knife and Tool's 2012 Ringed Razel Chisel and Bellied Razor Edge Blade

Magic Tool
 
Review Date: March 24, 2009
Reviewer: Beastmaster,
I give 4 out of 5 only because it is not made with Paul Bos heat treated S30V steel. However considering the price difference between the CRKT and the actual Graham Bros. razel this is a bargain. I have owned my CRKT ringed razel for about a month and have used it for varied reasons from prying staples off a barbed wire fence post to slicing through a block of smoked cheddar. I work in heavy construction, (bulldozers, etc.), and I will find many uses for this knife over the years. There are other reviews where some people bitch about the finish of the handle and the kydex sheath. If you are using this as an every day tool instead of staring, and petting it like an attention depraved psycho, then you won't care about the finish. The kydex sheath works like it should but I will eventualy get a leather one. All in all, it's a handy knife. Recomended.
Magic Tool
 
Review Date: December 3, 2008
Reviewer: Beastmaster,
I give 4 out of 5 only because it is not made with Paul Bos heat treated S30V steel. However considering the price difference between the CRKT and the actual Graham Bros. razel this is a bargain. I have owned my CRKT ringed razel for about a month and have used it for varied reasons from prying staples off a barbed wire fence post to slicing through a block of smoked cheddar. I work in heavy construction, (bulldozers, etc.), and I will find many uses for this knife over the years. There are other reviews where some people bitch about the finish of the handle and the kydex sheath. If you are using this as an every day tool instead of staring, and petting it like an attention depraved psycho, then you won't care about the finish. The kydex sheath works like it should but I will eventualy get a leather one. All in all, it's a handy knife. Recomended.
Good utility knife
 
Review Date: June 21, 2010
Reviewer: G. Powell, Seattle, WA USA
I've had my ringed Razel for about a week and I like it with some minor caveats. First the good stuff, it's sharp! With the kydex sheath mounted inside a pocket you have to be extra careful putting that knife away as you can easily miss the opening and get your thigh, or cut the pocket edge or corner, or your fingers as you pull it out (don't ask). To that end, I spent two hours and made a custom leather sheath. (You can see it in the photos section. Plans here: [...] ) Even so, putting the knife into the new sheath, it's pretty easy to cut the leather. In fact I used the knife to trim up the sheath and cut it out and that worked great, so why should I be surprised that it would cut the sheath going in?

Why buy this Razel vs the others? Cost and size. The Columbia River Knife and Tools 2011 Stubby Pocket Razel Chisel Razor Edge Blade has a bit smaller handle and a shorter blade, a nice knife but too small for my hands. Columbia River Knife and Tool's 2013 Razel SS7 Chisel with Bellied Razor and Veff Serrated Blade is really too big for a utility knife (and having the back edge sharp is really not useful in the shop). The Graham brothers also make custom Razels ([...]) some of them are over four hundred dollars! While they may be worth it, I'd have a really hard time justifying a purchase of a utility knife at that rate. The steel used by C.R.K.T. company is good if not great and seems to hold and edge.

Now performance, how does it really rack up? Well as a chisel it works, but for real wood working I prefer a real chisel with edge that is flat on one side and beveled on the other. Stanley 16-316 1-Inch Chisel Wood working chisels can be held by the sides and not cut your hand. The Ringed Razel does have a nice sharp blade and I did use a few light taps with a wood mallet to clean out a mortise hole and it worked pretty well, but having a knife "V" grind edge vs a chisel point made it harder to not dig too deep into the material. As a gasket scraper I'd be hard pressed to use any knife that I paid real money for. A good stiff putty knife like Hyde Tools 01140 1-1/2-Inch Stainless Steel Stiff Putty Knife, Black and Silver works really well, and is way less money. As for pulling fence staples, nothing beats a pair of fence pliers Irwin Industrial Tools 2078901 10-1/4-Inch Fencing Pliers with ProTouch Grips again, I'm not likely to put the corner of a knife under a staple and pull unless I've got no other choice. The Ringed Razel blade is thick at 0.18 inches but the edge is not likely to stay sharp and that thickness is along the spine not along the blade. Stripping wire? I prefer a Irwin Industrial Tools 2078309 8-Inch Multi Tool Stripper, Cutter and Crimper with ProTouch Grips if I have much to do. Otherwise with thin wire I end up cutting right through the insulation.

As a knife? It's a great work knife. Cutting leather is a breeze. Trimming a bit of wood, easy. Cutting cord? You betcha like butter! Bending while cutting? Not on your life. This knife is one thick hunk of steel.

What separates this knife from those hand made versions? The shape of the main blade, has a convex belly (although one of the custom knives has this) and the tip is angled back, sort of a reverse angled Tanto tip instead of squared off. For a utility knife, I prefer the straight edge, although the convex long edge does a good job of slicing meat and leather. The ring is totally round, which makes tapping cuts with a mallet a little harder, both on the mallet (less surface area) and to align the knife right, as the surface being round and the tip angled back makes it not quite align up the way a good wood chisel does. I'd prefer a squared off end. The tip edge is angled back, makes for an easy cut when you push back as it mimics your arm curve, but for chisel work, a squared off cut is better. And indeed the stubby Razel, and the stubby pocket Razel is ground that way. And the tip, probably should be a chisel grind instead of a "V" but for a push cut against cord or leather, knife "V" grind is better. But are those differences that worth the extra money? Not for me. I am hoping that the business relationship between the Graham brothers and C.R.K.T company is a good one, and that they make a version 2, which is closer to the custom knife, especially the squared off ring, but I wouldn't wait for that to happen if you are thinking about this knife.

Summary:
Pro: Inexpensive version of a very interesting custom knife.
Good for utility work.
Fits your hand really well

Con: Inside the pocket sheath, not really a great idea in practice.
Reverse angled tip vs squared.
rounded ring vs squared off.
convex beveled blade vs straight edge.
knife grind on tip vs chisel grind.

Recommend: Buy as a utility or camping knife. Or a present for the person in your life who works with tools, either as a hobby or a job.

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