Mikov dagger 398-ND-13/B Lovecka
Code: 398-ND-13/BRelated products
Product detailed description
The hunting dagger called LES is one of the most popular and is an absolute classic among the hunting knives of Mikov s.r.o.
The 398 LES series dagger is produced in two versions of blade width, namely type A (narrower blade) and type B (wider blade).
The blade is made of high quality stainless steel type 420 with hardness 53-55HRc. The spine of the blade is slightly sloping to the tip and is ground to two thirds of its length.
The classic curve of the blade to the tip to the dorsal side facilitates cutting with the tip of the knife. The steel of the blade also permeates the entire handle.
The protrusion of the guard is complemented by additional solid steel fittings in front of the blades, which also partly extend into the handle. In the grip they give the index finger a stable support and a clear indication of what is happening with the knife.With a total weight of about 250g it is a really robust tool.
The blades are made of exotic wood. The precision-ground slices of Indian rosewood core wood are characterised by a rich brown colour with
veining in golden brown, dark brown or even purple or purple-black shades. The texture of the wood is coarse, oily and pleasantly rough to the touch.
It is a proof of the quality of the material that, among other things, the heartwood of Indian rosewood is also used for the manufacture of fingerboards for stringed instruments.
The dagger is supplied with a leather sheath as standard.
The LES hunting dagger is one of the best-selling knives of Mikov s.r.o. Mikulášovice.
Blade material: stainless steel 420 - 55HRC
Sheath material: wood
Product length: 265 mm
Blade length: 130 mm
Blade Width: 38 mm
Product Weight: 293 g
Case: includes leather sheath
Additional parameters
Category: | Fixed blade |
---|---|
Blade material: | stainless steel |
Blade length: | 10 to 15 cm |
Handle material: | wood |
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Mikulášovice, still called "Nixdorf" in the 18th century, is undoubtedly the place where the cutlery industry in Bohemia began. This small border town lies in the northernmost point of the Czech Republic. There were many itinerant knife cutters in the area who were noticed by the merchant Ignaz Rösler and employed in his first knife factory.
Initially, the factory employed 100 workers, but by 1819 the number had doubled. The economic success of this factory led other inhabitants to set up other knife-making enterprises and auxiliary trades, and soon most of the citizens of Mikulášovice and the surrounding villages were connected with knife-making. Mikulášovice came to be known as the 'Czech Solingen'.