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Tel: 86 Email: cnqhsj hotmail. In American popular culture, there are a startling number of things which have their origins in the United States military. From undercut hairstyles to bomber jackets, and the topic of discussion today: The Ka-Bar combat knife. It is one of the most famous fixed blade knives in the world. The knife has a legendary status as being involved in tales that range from harrowing to heroic and everything in between.
The Ka-Bar is usually present, mentioned or not. How did it get to this point? It began with what can be described as a general dissatisfaction at the lack of versatility in the Mark I trench knife. The issue was that it was ill-suited to the purposes that soldiers required and for the situations they found themselves in.
The brass knuckle guards were reportedly a major limiting factor for gripping the knife in combat situations should things turn ugly and get into close-range. It was also difficult to carry as the guard made it troublesome to sheath into the scabbard.
Many knives failed under such conditions meaning they snapped or were rendered unusable. In response to a specification requesting for a modern individual fighting knife design for the U.
Marines, ordnance and quartermaster officials requested submissions from several military knife and tool suppliers to develop a suitable fighting and utility knife for individual Marines, using the U. Davis and Major Howard E. America contributed several important changes, including a longer, stronger blade, the introduction of a small fuller to lighten the blade, a peened pommel later replaced by a pinned pommel , a straight later, slightly curved steel crossguard, and a stacked leather handle for better grip.
The C2 proved easy to manufacture; the first production run was shipped by Camillus Cutlery Co. In naval service, the knife was used as a diving and utility knife from late onward, though the stacked leather handle tended to rot and disintegrate rapidly in saltwater.
In late the C2 replaced the Marine Raider Stiletto in service, a change welcomed by the marines of Col. Edson's 1st Raider Battalion, who found the Raider stiletto ideal for silent killing but of little use for anything else. Marines were often issued knives with "U. Mark 2" markings when Navy-issued Mark 2 knives were all that was available.
As its new name implied, the "Knife, Fighting Utility" was designed from the outset as a dual-purpose knife: it was both an effective combat knife and a utility tool, well-suited to the type of jungle warfare encountered by Marines in the Pacific theater.
After the Second World War, the U. In addition to military contract knives, the knife was produced for the civilian market, and the pattern enjoyed some popularity as a general-purpose hunting and utility knife. Camillus Cutlery Co. Brown, who renamed the company Union Razor Co. Of the four wartime manufacturers, Union Cutlery Co. Cutco Corporation, manufacturer of Cutco Cutlery , acquired the company in Marines today often give the blades, guards and pommels of their knives a few coats of non-reflective matte black spray paint to reduce reflected light and give them a little more protection against saltwater corrosion.
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