Sidearms & Scatterguns A real combat knife

kraigWY

CMP GSM MI
Full Member
Minuteman
Feb 10, 2006
2,296
305
77
Wyoming
Not long after arriving in Vietnam I lost my pocket knife. I bought one of these at a PX and carried it until I left country and they took it because is said "US". (Cant take government property home from a war zone}.

I sharpened it, and kept a razer sharp edge. It was great for slicing C-Rat white bread and toasting it. I kept in on a piece of 550 cord openned. It was great for cutting your self out of a wait-a-minute vines. (big knives were always in the way). Almost as fast openning c-rat cans as a P-38. Great in assisting in field stripping a M-60.

It's also none sparking for EOD work.

I just about used it for everything. Sure I had my M7 bayonet for digging holes. But other then that I don't think you could find a better knife. Sucker wont rust either.

Every since I got home I've been wanting one but the prices have ski rocketed. I've seen them for as much as $150 on e-bay.

Finely found one in a thrift store, excellent shape for $18.

It's going with my collection of bayonets and my paratrooper switch blade.

US_camp_knife.jpg
 
Re: A real combat knife

I found one of those with brown grips in a training area on fort Benning when I was a kid, still have it in a box somewhere.
 
Re: A real combat knife

Good thing they marked the can opener blade. I hate to think of you doggies losing your P38 and starving because you couldn't open your C-rats.
smirk.gif
 
Re: A real combat knife

I was given one as a kid from a neighbor and used it for years as a Boy Scout, during hunting and camping trips, and when I first came into the Marine Corps. I ended up giving it to a PFC in my squad when I was a squad leader.

Another military surplus pocket knife that I used a lot in years past (and still have) is the green handled German Bundeswehr pocket knife that I bought in a surplus store when I was in junior high. I think I paid $6 or $7 for it. It's never been my primary knife but it always seems to get thrown into the pack for every field exercise, deployment, or backpacking or hunting trip.