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Old 17th December 2017, 07:46 PM   #1
Ian
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Ausjulius,

Thanks for the information. Some of this I did not know. Do you have a picture of a metal plane--I'd be interested to see one and get an idea of how it was used.

Ian
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Old 17th December 2017, 10:28 PM   #2
Battara
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I just want to add to this discussion this: centuries ago good quality steel was in short supply. After the Spanish came and then especially after turn of the 20th century, better quality steel (i.e. spring steel, etc) became increasingly available, and thus less of a need for laminations in steel.
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Old 17th December 2017, 11:12 PM   #3
Ian
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Just to add some context to current Filipino knives, here are two that I believe are from Mindoro and were made recently. They are almost identical in style and have the same mark ("MIN81") stamped at the base of the blade. It appears they were made at the same time by the same person.

These are high quality blades, both well sharpened with a single bevel to the edge (in the manner of most Visayan knives). The handles are good and tight to the blind tang. Good working knives, practical and inexpensive, that would serve as a weapon if necessary.

Ian.

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Old 18th December 2017, 09:30 AM   #4
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I have a pair of those too, garabs, nice working knives, right-handed chisel edge (single bevel). Also, have a similarly edged, scabbarded and gripped ginunting and a pinute sword. I gather they are HC tool steel... All made by DaSilva.
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Old 27th December 2017, 02:27 PM   #5
ausjulius
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian
Just to add some context to current Filipino knives, here are two that I believe are from Mindoro and were made recently. They are almost identical in style and have the same mark ("MIN81") stamped at the base of the blade. It appears they were made at the same time by the same person.

These are high quality blades, both well sharpened with a single bevel to the edge (in the manner of most Visayan knives). The handles are good and tight to the blind tang. Good working knives, practical and inexpensive, that would serve as a weapon if necessary.

Ian.

.
hi, yep they look ok , but they are not native mindoro knives they are made by settlers. probably visayans form the lowlands.
but the general rule of thumb is the further from modern life you go in the phillipines the more likely youll find a good knife.
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Old 27th December 2017, 02:24 PM   #6
ausjulius
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian
Ausjulius,

Thanks for the information. Some of this I did not know. Do you have a picture of a metal plane--I'd be interested to see one and get an idea of how it was used.

Ian
it is an example of a Visayans metal plane
if you want i can find videos of it being used
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Last edited by Robert; 31st December 2017 at 12:40 AM.
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Old 27th December 2017, 04:23 PM   #7
Ian
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ausjulius


it is an example of a Visayans metal plane

https://ibb.co/m3keKw https://ibb.co/deiS6b

if you want i can find videos of it being used
Thanks ausjulius. Interesting looking tool. It appears to be used like a draw knife or shaver. I would appreciate a link to the video you mentioned.

Ian.

PS: I've attached the pic in your link for the Forum's files--these links tend to get broken and we lose good information in our archives unless the pics are uploaded to this site.
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