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Bermuda Mini Sykes

Encontraproduto.com.br - Bermuda Mini Sykes
Encontraproduto.com.br - Bermuda Mini Sykes
Encontraproduto.com.br - Bermuda Mini Sykes
Encontraproduto.com.br - Bermuda Mini Sykes
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R$339.00   R$149.00
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The Fairbairn Sykes fighting knife is one of the most recognizable blades in the world. Created in the heart of World War 2, the Fairbairn Sykes dagger would become the beloved sidearm of the British Commando units and continues to influence modern fighting knives today. But what exactly is a Fairbairn Sykes commando knife, and where did it come from? Watch here to learn about the F-S knife!nnSupport The Knife Life with a Youtube Membership!nhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh54S88MzHgiXuHDPzEez2Q/joinnnCheck out these resources to learn about the F-S Knife:nRoy Shadbolt's website on the F-S Knife: https://www.fsknife.com/nWolfgang Peter Michael's book: https://amzn.to/3SuuNDsnRon Flook's Book: https://amzn.to/3eSLURHnLeroy Thompson's Book: https://amzn.to/3eSLURHnnSpecial thanks to our Sponsor Kyoku knives! You can find their knife roll bag here:nhttps://amzn.to/3MWcxSjnUse promo code KYOKUSLK to get 10% off through 12/31/22!nnAlso check out their Chef's knives here as well:nhttps://amzn.to/3F8nTk5nUse promo code KYOKU3CR to get 10% off through 12/31/22!nnAmazon links are affiliate links. Proceeds are used to grow the channel and incur no additional cost to you. Thank-you for your support!

Ficha Técnica e Modo de uso:


O Mini livre pra brincar vestindo a Bermuda Mini Sykes! Feita em algodão de alta qualidade, garante muito conforto.
Possui passador para cintos e bolsos.
Combine com camisetas, camisas ou regatas, tênis ou chinelos.
Comprando esta peça, você viabiliza cinco pratos de comida através do nosso Programa 1P5P.
Bermuda produzida eticamente no Brasil.



Como quem comprou avalia este produto


April 23 2025

3
  georgeversluis8442


No mention of them snapping off at the gaurd. Poor quality steel, romanticized crap

April 23 2025

3
  wileecoyote1262


My Fairbain broke in two right at end of blade and beginning of rat tail tang. It has been full tang knifes fr me ever since

April 23 2025

3
  Soacwiththaface


April 23 2025

3
  JohnSmith-pd1fz


Thirty two seconds of typically american banging thumping hollowoodisation of what ought to have been a simple, straightforward and EASY TO WATCH video was enough for me. Thank you very much! You might as well have said "made in the usa right at the start and saved me those thirty two seconds.

April 23 2025

5
  theknifedude1881


When I was 8-10 my dad gave me one of these for Christmas . Mom wondered “why on earth he thought this was a good idea”? He said, “when he was that age he would have wanted one”. I imagine mine was cheaply made after the war to capitalize on the Army & Navy Surplus market. I didn’t treat it very well and I think the blade became a spear point after the handle broke off.

April 23 2025

3
  magritteetmoncouteau


I think this is my favorite episode so far. Thanks!

April 23 2025

3
  gwynjustice6664


Interesting that bit about the knife rolling. I remember hearing an RAF specialist talking about using his F-S knife mainly as a stabbing tool on sentries “stab into the throat cover the mouth and punch forwards, ripping out the lot”. Grizzly stuff, but makes sense considering you might mess up a slashing cut.

April 23 2025

4
  brendanukveteran2360


The 2"" guard is the standard width - you is knowin wot u is speakin about

April 23 2025

5
  manofkentcatapultsgunsando5069


Imagine coming across fairbairn and paddy mayne on the same day

April 23 2025

4
  angrydoggy9170


One thing I’ve noticed in most reviews on this dagger is that nobody seems to comment on that little knob at the end of the grip. It’s really useful to knock someone out as it will break the skull in a powerful strike.

April 23 2025

4
  OkieSketcher1949


I was given what I think would be a pattern 1. The blade was somewhat shiny and where it met the hand guard on one side was the Wilkinson trade mark but there was no marking on the other side, the handle was ‘checkered’ brass, the guard appeared to be made of the same metal as the blade. At the end of the handle was a brass knob with a ‘pointed’ end. It was given to me by an older gentleman who stated it had been his brothers when he served with the British in WWII. The sheath was about totally gone so he tossed it away. He went over what his brother told him on how it was to be used. Rather gory. He covered how to use it against an opponent’s neck, kidneys, heart, shoulder at the base of the neck, and how to thrust it up into the back of the skull from where the neck and skull meet. The knob was for hitting your enemy’s skull and crushing it. A lot of what he said I took as ‘BS’ but I accepted it as a gift. A bit over a year later it was stolen out of my foot locker while I had the foot locker stored in a ‘secure’ storage place while I was on deployment. I now wish I had it back.

April 23 2025

5
  BeardedChieftain


I own a Sheffield F-S knife.

April 23 2025

4
  haroldellis9721


I turned and knurled a brass handle for my 3rd pattern FS.

April 23 2025

4
  jorgefernandez6407


Excellent video! Thoroughly enjoyed it!!!

April 23 2025

5
  Bigtimecharlie1349


I would say it looks like a mediaeval bollox knife

April 23 2025

4
  ferdonandebull


Guys this isn’t really a fighting knife. But then again fighting with a knife is stupid. This is an ambush knife. Get in and get done. It isn’t a combat knife.. the blade is not suitable for use for all the things a knife is handy for in a soldiers life. Not saying it is a bad design. For a stabbing knife for ambush it is a great knife.. even though I think the grip would allow some twisting in your hand and that the grip doesn’t help orientate the blade edges in your hands. But pulling it from the sheath does orientate the edges. If you were in need of a digging or prying tool this would not be the knife you want. If you were wood crafting to make litters or covers for fox holes this would not be the knife you wanted. If you were getting off a boat and sneaking into a town to blow shit up? Yep this is the knife.. But for all other things you need a knife for including face to face fighting any number of bayonets are a better choice… I would not throw this knife away though..

April 23 2025

5
  peaceleader7315


Remnant of the Roman military short sword.. fast and efficient.. hmmmm..

April 23 2025

4
  paulruprai1274


Dont buythese daggers as general marines weapons then!

April 23 2025

3
  behindthespotlight7983


outstanding

April 23 2025

3
  JeremyS86


Crazy my dad has one of these

April 23 2025

5
  rotax636nut5


I have a 2nd pattern 11 3/4" long FS dagger myself so I was interested in the history of the 2 gentlemen concerned and the development of the knife, thanks for posting this video

April 23 2025

5
  frankmartinez4856


My Fairbairn was stolen! My friend had pick this up for me

April 23 2025

4
  mariorodrigues5796


Com crtza uma faca de respeito e eficaz nunca tive uma e são raras e quando acho o preço é alto

April 23 2025

4
  666toysoldier


It was not designed for face-to-face knife fighting, but ambush and quiet death.

April 23 2025

4
  rickworkman4608


No one ever lists weights. Supposedly the 3rd blade is lighter. I know production varied, but it had to be a range. What are the weights of all patterns?

April 23 2025

5
  MrDaniel-West1970


Y LOVE the FS knife !

April 23 2025

5
  Tobias77999


I just got my first F-S knife today!!! Sooo excited to do some research!!

April 23 2025

3
  MichaelRobertson-i8f


The Bowie Knife was American the British one was the Fairborn

April 23 2025

5
  owais146


THANKSSSSSSSSSSSSS SIR

April 23 2025

3
  desbravatube


Like aplicado

April 23 2025

3
  wayneholmes637


The original sentry removal tool.

April 23 2025

3
  heavychevy4616


awesome video man, thank u

April 23 2025

4
  1Jonboat


Ahhh, my first felony; I remember it well ~

April 23 2025

3
  bradleycurtis4703


My brother had one given to him its got established 1700. Brown handle with gold red and black stripes on it what does that mean

April 23 2025

5
  dwynnell


There is a 4th pat available now. I don’t think it’s for civvys though, but I’ve been told different things by different people.

April 23 2025

5
  markadkins9290


Great stuff!

April 23 2025

5
  thomasmyers9128


April 23 2025

4
  keithdurose7057


The use of the commando dagger extends to the present day. Where a member of the SBS used one to take out a member of ISIS terror organization.

April 23 2025

4
  robertdeen8741


When I was a young lad of 21, I had an older lady friend. She was born in Shanghai. Her father served on the police force with the great man. Ian Fleming must of met Fairbairn at camp X in WW2. Makes one wonder if it helped inspire Bond.

April 23 2025

5
  robertdeen8741


When I was a young lad of 21, I had an older lady friend. She was born in Shanghai. Her father served on the police force with the great man. Ian Fleming must of met Fairbairn at camp X in WW2. Makes one wonder if it helped inspire Bond.

April 23 2025

4
  NickT1861


I’m sure it’s an excellent weapon but it just doesn’t look nearly as good as the average Bowie esthetically

April 23 2025

5
  michaelangelo7511


Is this where the Marine Corps got the design for the WW2 Raiders Knife?

April 23 2025

4
  Styphon


I had a smaller double-edged knife once. When I bought it the store had it and some similar blades characterized as "Arkansas Toothpicks". It was a Coleman, the same company as the famous camping stove and lantern.

April 23 2025

4
  drengskap


I believe that a depiction of the FS knife still appears in the Royal Marine Commando insignia.

April 23 2025

4
  lisadhom262


I recall an article published years ago which claimed the original fs daggers were fabricated in Shanghai police armory by cutting down obsolete Wilkinson sword bayonets. Not sure what model of bayonet was used and cannot recall authors name.

April 23 2025

4
  robertmiller6868


Handle is too small diameter

April 23 2025

3
  anthonyburke5656


As a kid I was given a Fairbairn Sykes by my Uncle, I don’t know where he got it, he was in the Italian campaign and later in the Balkans, BUT the knife he gave me has a Knuckle Duster handle! There are no markings I can see on the knife. I believe he got the knife either in Italy, England or the Balkans. I’m not sure he was “issued” with the knife. I’d be interested to know if anyone else has a similar one and knows the history of the type.

April 23 2025

3
  anthonyburke5656


I always thought the origins of the FS were from the Italian stiletto via the Royal Navy “Dirk”

April 23 2025

3
  craigthescott5074


I have a Scottish boot knife that’s very similar from the 1700’s it’s got more of a triangle blade that’s very sharp for stabbing but doesn’t really have much of an edge. It’s very decorated the hilt and pommel are carved silver. The handle is black bone or ebony with a silver wire wrap. The blade is 6 inches total length 10 inches. Very beautiful knife I wonder if Fairburn got his idea from this type of boot knife.

April 23 2025

4
  kurtasiak


super very interesting

April 23 2025

4
  SoldierDrew


The Case V42 was the perfect light infantry commando combat dagger ever made. Albeit was a WWII production and not a WWI production. Historical fact, according to research conducted by Col Rex Applegate , the most confirmed knife kills of WWII were made by a Fin commando using a humble 5" blade Sami Pukko knife to kill Russian sentries.

April 23 2025

3
  petemitchell6788


April 23 2025

3
  mississippidrifter5960


Hopefully you do a video on the EK-44.

April 23 2025

3
  RandyBeretta-db5bg


Ya gotta love History.!

April 23 2025

5
  bmclaughlan


My guard is stamped Sheffield and England. Post-war import?

April 23 2025

3
  peteric100


Where might I look to find the value of several of my knives? 2nd pattern brass with a unique cartouche. Civil war spear point Bowie marked 1861 on the blade in front of the guard. Plain wood handle. Two Microtech Combat Talons. One is two tone and the other is Damascus.

April 23 2025

4
  0nan-Son-of-Juda-Brother-of-Er


Gerber Mark II

April 23 2025

5
  truxton1000


My grandad was a policeman in Norway during the war. He was also in the resistance and had a hard time between trying to help anyone he could, delaying arrests of people he didn’t want to arrest and generally balancing all this in a way that he would not get arrested himself and sent to Germany as a prisoner. He told me he had a backpack ready packed if he got suspicion that he was about to be arrested. He showed me the very backpack with its content as he had kept it like that after the war too as a reminder of that time. One of the thing in there was one of these FS knifes, he said he had got it through contacts in England as he was in the resistance, apparently they were a common knife back then for member of the resistance… I got this knife after he died, it’s as I understand an early version of 2nd version on the FS knife, all shiny metal, no markings on it, the leather sheath is probably from the first version as it has a leather strap with a press stud around the handle, still excellent condition through the leather strap is sheared off in one place.

April 23 2025

4
  ShaamoneHeeHee


We still have our grandads commando knife that saw service and action in Burma during ww2.

April 23 2025

4
  tessalyyvuo1667


A slogan for these daggers used against the Nazis could have been: "A dirty weapon against a dirty foe!"

April 23 2025

4
  BlackRaven-w4e


This is not a combat knife, at least primarily. It is a silent killer knife, a commando dagger.

April 23 2025

4
  jamesellis2784


Brass in pocket . Would .

April 23 2025

3
  songkok7hitam


The purpose of the knife was to kill a man brutally, and not to prepare for a campsite. Funny these comments cannot see the difference

April 23 2025

3
  chinomedina8530


I have had this type of knife for quite some time now. The only marking on the one I have says PAKISTAN. Can anyone out there in the knife world tell me if this is legit or a copy?? Really would appreciate it. Thk you in advance

April 23 2025

3
  lievenvanlint7717


FS fighting knife (dagger): very good knife, but never was it the first. It is a knife inspired by its forebears, and is still inspiring knife design today. It is a moment in the evolution of knife design, and a very good one at that. Thanks to it being adapted by the legendary elite forces of the British army made it a legend. Not the other way around. But it could have well have been not the FS kniife. That is important to keep in mind.

April 23 2025

3
  BeyondtheBearings


Brutal and I love it. Very detailed history. Myself is also a fan of FS knives ❤ Simple and deadly

April 23 2025

3
  paulwiggins183


Really appreciated your pointing out the weaknesses of the design... some things that are simply beautiful are also delicate..

April 23 2025

5
  jeanclauderoget3756


I was in the 3 para commando in 1972, and this was one of the knife we received will the fn fal.

April 23 2025

3
  jaysonparkhurst7422


I appreciate this youtube video

April 23 2025

4
  AdamAndrzejewski


German invasion of Poland. Not nazi invasion of Poland. Please.

April 23 2025

4
  johnfry950


I used one in Boy Scouts & FFL. This chap genuinely knows his stuff-4 sure….

April 23 2025

4
  rex-y7v


The first few thousand were actually made from cut down 1898 Lee Metford/Enfield bayonets which had a 12 inch blade hence the large ricasso. These are mega dollars.

April 23 2025

3
  jcw9539


Didn’t James Bond use it in the books

April 23 2025

3
  DJones476


JTF 2, Baby! Yeah!

April 23 2025

5
  howardhughes7596


Neighbor had one he brought back and it was scary just to look at.

April 23 2025

3
  russellseitz


The answer to your qustion depends on the size of your hand. The first original F-S I was handed was issued to a OSS North Africa officer assigned because of his anthropological experience in that theater prior to the war. On first hefting it I found it to be at once a trifle smaller and significantly more dense than I expected.

April 23 2025

3
  Max-Current


Not through tang but rat tail and its achilles heel. The brass handle had a specific function; due to weight it falls in the hand making it very nimble for fighting techniques.

April 23 2025

3
  kevinmorrice


i used to help out in a care home, and this one lovely old man was ex sas, i used to roll his wheelchair by the window and listen to his stories, one time i asked him about his 1st pattern fairbairn sykes he keeps in his drawer in his room, and he said "laddie, most people would casually call that chunk of metal a fighting knife, which is horse shit and you know it, its a killing knife plain and simple, thats what we used it for, no for fighting, but for sticking in throats and killing, we were no getting paid to offer them a cup of tea and a couple rounds in the boxing ring before there bedtime, we were being paid to go up behind them and tear there throats out, so stop calling it a fighting knife, its a killing knife and i can guarantee thats all its good for"