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Boker Manufaktur - Traditional Series Trapper - 2 Blades - 3.125" Blade - Stainless Steel - Brown Bone Handle - 110732

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Price:
$59.99
SKU:
788857020227
Current Stock:
2
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Product Description

Böker Manufaktur Traditional Series Trapper

This new series of traditional pocket knives offers all the best components, featuring bone scales, nickel silver bolsters, brass linings and high carbon stainless steel blades. For those who don't mind using two hands.

  • Overall Length:7.25"
  • Blade Length:3.125"
  • Blade Thickness:0.09"
  • Number of Blades:2
  • Blade Material:Stainless Steel
  • Blade Style:Clip Point, Spey
  • Blade Grind:Flat
  • Finish:Polish
  • Edge Type:Plain
  • Handle Length:4.25"
  • Handle Thickness:0.54"
  • Handle Material:Bone
  • Color:Brown
  • Bolster Material:Nickel Silver
  • Frame/Liner:Brass
  • Weight:3.52 oz.
  • User:Right Hand, Left Hand
  • Knife Type:Manual
  • Opener:Nail Nick
  • Lock Type:Slip Joint
  • Brand:Boker
  • Model:Trapper
  • Model Number:110732
  • Country of Origin:Germany

Bone

For millennia, animal bones have been used to make knife handles. Today, the most commonly used varieties are cattle and reindeer bones.

Since ancient times, animal bones have been used to make tools and jewelry as well as art and religious artefacts. Early historic research has shown that even Homo erectus, the first upright ancestor of Homo sapiens, made tools from animal bones several hundred thousand years ago. The earliest bone carvings made by Homo sapiens are more than 30,000 years old and were created out of mammoth ivory. One major reason for the use of animal bones to make tools and other objects was that suitable wood wasn\'t always available everywhere. During the ice age, for instance, wood was scarce in Central Europe, meaning that animal bones became an important resource. In the Middle Ages, animal bones were still used in Europe to make tools and other things, being replaced only gradually in the modern era.

In regions with an important historic bone carving tradition, e.g. southern Germany, Switzerland, Austria and South Tyrol, in which artisanal horn carving – carving objects from antlers – has also remained popular, animal bones are still used to make knife handles. Where animal bones are used today to make knife handles they are mostly cattle and reindeer bones. One major reason for the use of reindeer bones is that bone carving was popular for many centuries in Scandinavia, the main habitat of reindeer. Due to their similar structure and color, cattle and reindeer bones are often used to replace protected and prohibited ivory.

Since the beginning of the industrial age in the 19th century, the role of animal bones as a material for knife handles has diminished, but they are still used every now and again in the production of premium knives.

Nickel Silver

Nickel silver is the name of an alloy containing copper, nickel and zinc that has a silver-like look. In the knife industry, it is mainly used for fittings, especially for the so-called bolsters.

Nickel silver is an alloy of copper (45-70%), nickel (5-30%) and zinc (8-45%). In some cases, it can also contain lead, iron, manganese or pewter. Due to its nickel content, nickel silver is harder and more resistant to formation than pure copper, which makes it particularly suitable for knife fittings. Nickel silver can be work hardened (by forging and milling) at temperatures below 500°C. Nickel silver has several other names, some of which points to the history of the alloy, including argentan and packfong. The material is also known as German silver. The alloy originated in China, where it was known as packfong. In Europe, a copper/nickel/zinc alloy similar to packfong was developed in the late 18th century in Thuringia.

The material was improved simultaneously in Saxony and Berlin in the early 19th century. While the Saxon alloy was sold as argentan, the product from Berlin was named nickel silver. Both alloys had similar properties. Apart from these historic terms, the material is also known as alpacca. Its silvery white surface makes this alloy look like silver, but it is much less expensive than the precious metal. Right after the production process was developed, nickel silver was used to make silverware.

Today, nickel silver is still used in the industrial production of silverware, sometimes as a carrier material for silver-plated utensils. In the knife industry, nickel silver is used to make fittings. The crossguard of cutting and stabbing weapons is often made from this alloy.

 


Other Details

Manufacturer:
Boker
Type:
multi tool