Becker BK62 vs. Esee PR4: Which Kephart Knife Will Stand Above the Rest?

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2019
  • For Wilderness Survival and Bushcraft classes in Central Oregon contact me at dward5500@gmail.com

Komentáře • 113

  • @matt_balomenos
    @matt_balomenos Před 4 lety +21

    I have the kabar Becker kephart and mine came shaving sharp. Its my favorite knife to date.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety +3

      It is a nice knife. I think Kephart made a great design!

    • @maxtoll8290
      @maxtoll8290 Před 3 lety

      Mine came butter knife sharp. Took a while to put a decent edge on it.

  • @russelllieser4226
    @russelllieser4226 Před 4 lety +7

    Shocking the BK62 came dull I have a BK2 and it came wicked sharp. Great video thanks for your time.

  • @abandonedotter4270
    @abandonedotter4270 Před rokem

    The Becker is great but man, they're proud of it.

  • @starlingblack814
    @starlingblack814 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Dan for a great comparison and review.

  • @nuancolar7304
    @nuancolar7304 Před 3 lety +7

    It's not an exact a Kephart design, but you could try the Firecraft FC4. You get the 4" blade, and it has a rounded spine with a ferro notch. You can strike a ferro, but you still have plenty of push surface on the spine that won't kill your thumb.

  • @charless8641
    @charless8641 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I felt the same about the handle but after using it for about a year I really like it, I have not had a issue with hot spots even with prolonged use.
    I also have a LT Right knife that has a similar handle and I like it a lot the difference is the LT Right is thicker and definitely a better fit for my xl hands.
    Great video and thanks for sharing. 😃

  • @seanwhite304
    @seanwhite304 Před 3 lety +2

    Esee and Bark River are my favorite fixed blade companies.

  • @therealkarlcolt7116
    @therealkarlcolt7116 Před 5 lety +4

    Hey... I have that becker. I use it for cutting open cans with no pop top. Good review

  • @margaretadler6162
    @margaretadler6162 Před 4 lety

    I have had my BK62 for over a year, came very sharp I love it!

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      I do really like the knife a lot! I think it was a fluke that I got one not sharp. Thank You for watching!

    • @adrianotero7963
      @adrianotero7963 Před 3 lety

      Not a fluke.....mine was also dull.....

  • @TimeAttack2003
    @TimeAttack2003 Před 2 měsíci

    Customize EVERY knife you purchase to YOUR preference! You dont ruin it you simply make it awesome for YOUR use!

  • @naughtyfred1
    @naughtyfred1 Před 5 lety +10

    I don’t like the supposedly plastic liner in the Becker Kephart sheath. I think if Condor can make a great leather sheath for their Kephart, so can Becker. In fact, the Becker Kephart reminds me mostly on the Condor one, except better w/o the great sheath

    • @peterkinberger9741
      @peterkinberger9741 Před rokem +1

      Petar, carbon steel that touches leather will rust very quick due to moisture content . Dry leather absorbs moisture like a sponge. To eliminate this Becker created a plastic liner so air could flow around the knife, thus, limiting the rust factor by nearly 85 per cent or better. The leather sheath is made of premium leather and there is a method that can be used to pull out the liner if need be. The leather can be shrunk by soaking in water and allowing it to completely dry in the open air with sunlight. This may take several days to dry out, depending on the nature of leather used. When the leather is almost completely dry with only a hint of moisture, I would put the knife into the sheath, press the sheath around and against the knife and allow it to sun dry for a couple more days. After I know the leather is completely dry and the knife is well held. I would move on to the final step, if it still needs tightening, I would only moisten up the areas that need further shrinking and let dry with knife outside of case. The final procedure would be to use waterproofing, like a light amount of mink oil or NikWax or other waterproofing wax compound and buff it in to the surface. I would only do this final step making certain that the sheath is completely dry and hard as it is going to get. Make certain the plasti c liner is pulled out before attempting these procedures. The liner is usually velcroed in and would require something thin to release the velcro. Some times bacon strips ars packed in vacuumed packages that have a thin sheet of plastic behind the bacon slices. Other vacuumed and packaged products use plaxtic sheets. Sometimes new shirts have thin plaxtic sheets instead of cardboard. There are very thin plastic sheets used for food cutting and preparatio that can be used. Trace an outline of the knife on the sheet, cut it out. Once cut out, place the sheets knife point between the leather and the plastic liner and push down until the velcro on the back releases, if insert does not come out, make another traced k ife pattern out of the same plastin and insert it between the leather and plastic as I did before, pushing all the way down and breakung tbe velcro seal. The insert should now be reafy to pull out. Make certain the plastic insert is pulled free from the sheath before shrinking the leather, as I do. The insert can always be reinserted by reversing these pull out techniques. I make sheaths and know what moisture does to carbon steel. Rust occurs quicker on 1075 than it does on 1095 and plain 1095 rusts quicker than 1095 Cro-van steel. I hope this helps you and you may want to reconsider leather to knife contact. It costs extra for a manufacturer to put an insert in a leather sheath and for nicer knives, it is meant to protect them. Cheap quality knives use inserts to protect the inferior sheath material form tearing apart quickly., without concern for the knife, also made with cheap material. Becker did the right thing with plastic inserts for high carbon 1095 CroVan steel. I wish you much luck ! Dobre Djien !

  • @grumpyuncle.
    @grumpyuncle. Před 4 měsíci

    This is good content. Thank you for sharing!

  • @MTwoodsrunner
    @MTwoodsrunner Před 4 lety +1

    I love the heat treat Becker uses on their 1095 cro-van...not crazy about their edge geometry, but with a slight adjustment to the edge profile...WOW! a huge difference!
    A tough and long wearing steel for sure!
    What slowed down the esee through the summer sausage was its sabre grind...i think the esee came with a better edge geometry and that why it slipped so easily through the skin of the tomato...atb...woods

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      Thank you for your input! I appreciate hearing from a fellow fan of Becker and Esee.

  • @fredcourtney03
    @fredcourtney03 Před rokem +1

    I think the fact that you had to sharpen the Becker out of the box is a big difference and Gives the edge to the Esee. The coating on the blade will also help with rust in the Deep South where I live. I love the BK 62 but I think I have to give it to Esee PR 4. Just my input. Thanks

  • @centurycity
    @centurycity Před 3 lety +1

    Summer sausage I am getting me some . Great review thanks.

  • @blackhawkbushcraft
    @blackhawkbushcraft Před 2 lety +2

    Love Esee and Becker/Ka-bar! 👍 I don't own either of these Kephart style knives, but there’s always room for “just one more knife.” 😆 I love Kephart inspired designs-simple and they just work well! 👍 Probably the closest Kephart-ish I own and use is the LT Wright Genesis. Love that knife! 👍 It’s not a traditional Kephart knife, but I’m pretty darn sure Kephart was the influence behind the design.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 2 lety +1

      Well, since there's always room for one more, I think you might really like the PR4. My favorite bushcraft knife, with handles from the Knife connection .
      L.T. Wright does have some very nice knives.

    • @blackhawkbushcraft
      @blackhawkbushcraft Před 2 lety

      @@ochocobushcraft1742 Just might have to pick one up. 👍😁

  • @scottsmith6571
    @scottsmith6571 Před 3 lety

    Have both like both

  • @ffoxyff
    @ffoxyff Před 4 lety +4

    Very good comparison of the two. Wish Eathon Becker had made the 4 inch model.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      I agree with you. A 4" version would be awesome!

    • @bereantrb
      @bereantrb Před 4 lety

      Jack Russel It wouldn’t surprise me if they do since the original was sold in both sizes. If they have any plans on doing so they probably needed to test the market with one model first.

  • @jordy703
    @jordy703 Před 3 lety +2

    Bought the PR4 after my Mora Garberg and i love it. Indeed the handles looks awesome but for comfort maybe a broomstick handle would have been better i think. My opinion is the same the Becker looks authentic but its to large for me. Perfect review and clear thank u sir.

  • @lorenray9479
    @lorenray9479 Před 2 lety +2

    My new hobby may now be modifying old work knives into kepharts. I found an old full flat grind to make into a small knife like those you are showing. Just need to find quality rivets or screws for knife handles. A tool to cut/ shape blades seems to be a necessity. Belt sander also!

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 2 lety +1

      Would like to see your finished work.

    • @lanceschultz7132
      @lanceschultz7132 Před rokem +1

      Just need corby bolts or loveless. Easy to order.

    • @lorenray9479
      @lorenray9479 Před rokem +2

      Made 2. One a little rough blade, but antique high carbon blades are premium to use out of doors. Even blackberry vines submit to my kephart blades! Strikes a rod like a sparkler on the 4th of july! Butchers chickens too. Opens paint cans great! Love my kepharts for EDC! Legal, safe and sane!!!

  • @freddyg6940
    @freddyg6940 Před měsícem

    At 8:40 said “slice the tomatoes” and Press Cut almost a chop 😂

  • @PistolPointer
    @PistolPointer Před 4 lety

    Great review. Really like both of these knives but tend to grab the PR4. Just picked up an Ontario Blackbird SK4 though. It may pick up some of the use. I may do a video showing it next to these two for a comparison.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      Thank You! Would like to see you do that video. I have never used a Blackbird.

  • @Pharto_Stinkus
    @Pharto_Stinkus Před 3 lety +4

    I own both of these, in addition to a few other kephart inspired knives. Neither of these is my favorite, but I do prefer the Esee in general. While FFG knives are great in the woods, and easy to sharpen, I personally prefer a saber grind. Also, Aesthetically the Esse is a better looking knife. This matters to me. I don't subscribe to the whole idea that a "real" bushcraft knife should be plain, simple, and ugly. In addition to a knife performing the way I want it to, looking at it has to bring me joy, the Esee does, the Becker doesn't. Knives are very personal. Just because Kephart preferred this shape, this handle, and a FFG, doesn't mean it's the "best" knife for the job, or that other configurations won't work. Kephart, Kochanski, Canterbury, and Mears, arguably the most well-known and recognized experts in bushcraft and woodlore, each prefer a different type of knife. The two people I learned most of my outdoors stuff from, my uncle and my step-father, generally preferred Buck knives, and did everything that needed to be done, well, with those knives (usually a 119, but sometimes others).

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 3 lety +1

      My Dad was also a huge fan of Buck. Found Esee on my own over time and really like the brand, and of course the warranty. Thank You for sharing, I appreciate it!

    • @adrianotero7963
      @adrianotero7963 Před 3 lety +1

      To each his own......

  • @garyjacobs2789
    @garyjacobs2789 Před 4 lety +1

    The extra inch blade cames to play if you every have to use the knife as weapon. All my fixed blades are between 4 and five .
    Perfect length for a do it all knife. That is reason these knives were a favorite of these famous woodsmen . All just remember all knives at time were stone sharped. All five it gets to be a pain .

  • @wizardofahhhs759
    @wizardofahhhs759 Před 3 lety +1

    I made one with a 4.5" blade, that's the sweet spot for me.

  • @luisloya1120
    @luisloya1120 Před 16 dny

    The Becker's walnut handle will swell when wet.😮

  • @James-ke5sx
    @James-ke5sx Před 21 dnem

    If Becker could have made a second version 1 inch smaller that would have been a hit. I ordered the Becker. I have a Esee 4 & 6 but I have wanted something in between with an uncoated blade, nothing fancy.

  • @sperrinoutdoors7642
    @sperrinoutdoors7642 Před 5 lety +1

    Nice 1 buddy great upload

  • @andyhooutdoors
    @andyhooutdoors Před 5 lety +5

    Just saw your video and I just wanted to say that I have owned the PR4 for a year and a half now and the handle is not posing an issue for me. I too lament about the rather thin handle and was worried it will produce hot spots when doing tasks like push cuts and so on. Not an issue at all for me. I still wished the handle could be a little thicker, or slightly rounder, but I am fine with what it is. Brought the PR4 to a camping trip in the tropical rainforest of western peninsula Malaysia and it excels tremendously. I brought a second knife there just in case but never used it at all during the trip. I am so hooked on the PR4. I had thought of getting the Becker but the 5” blade length was what puts me off. So after watching your video I don’t feel I need the Becker, unless they put out another one with a 4” blade length.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 5 lety +1

      I absolutely love my PR4! I have a video where i put G10 handles on it and they are amazing! It is called Esee PR4 Handle Upgrade. I think you will like it. Thank you for watching.

    • @andyhooutdoors
      @andyhooutdoors Před 5 lety +2

      Ochoco Bushcraft Oh yes. I know there is the handle upgrade available from The Knife Connection. That is where I purchased the PR4 from, but I love the mountain texturing on the PR4 which I think makes the whole knife look so cool, and so I decided to stick with the original. Would be great if I could get liners for it though.

  • @scottsmith6571
    @scottsmith6571 Před 4 lety +1

    Both great knives I’m oredering both

  • @Bamboothought
    @Bamboothought Před 4 lety

    I too prefer a soft spine , but the extra blade length is very handy when poking around in the fire..

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      Agreed, thank you for watching!

    • @SupermanBB
      @SupermanBB Před 11 měsíci

      All knives are heat treated and tempered by heat to exact temperatures to achieve their hardness. I’d be very careful “poking around in the fire” with any knife, as there’s a good chance you’ll ruin the temper near the edge. Lowering the hardness and drastically reducing edge retention

  • @nitetrekker
    @nitetrekker Před 4 lety

    Have you ever tested the TOPS Lite Trekker? I'm trying to decide between it and the PR4. Thanks

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety +1

      I haven't ever used the Trekker. But I can say that if you decide to go with the PR 4, you won't be dissapointed. It is a knife that feels really good in the hand. As soon as you hold it, you can just tell that it wants to go to work.
      Thank you for watching!

  • @francissobotka8725
    @francissobotka8725 Před rokem

    My pr4 is my new edc knife .I replaced the scales with tkc scales and its damn near perfect .

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před rokem

      Couldn't agree more! The PR4 is my go to knife in camp. A true joy to use.

  • @navigator1372
    @navigator1372 Před 5 měsíci

    Which nessmuk do you prefer? Becker or esee? I decided to buy the becker cause of the sheath. Im not much into leather

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 5 měsíci

      I really like the Esee with The Knife Connection handles. Put on.

  • @madedigital
    @madedigital Před 10 měsíci +2

    well from other youtuber he said the Kepheart is not a Full flat grind this is a major detail most have missed ..Its a full convex fromspine edge tear drop fatter in the middle helps with splitting and carving wood. with that being said it spiked my interest more to the point i want one ...therefore Bark river is the only way to go then the Becker.

  • @lonewandererbushcraftwildc6822

    I also prefer my knives to have a sharp spine for bark scraping or fat wood scraping I don't use a sharp spine for ferro rod

  • @lonewandererbushcraftwildc6822

    The original kephart Knife was a double convex neither of these knives have that but the ka bar is the closest to the original in regards to shape

  • @Airik1111bibles
    @Airik1111bibles Před 3 lety +3

    Ontario Sk5 is also a great kephart design .

  • @MaNi-cn7to
    @MaNi-cn7to Před 3 lety

    Thx for vid! i have Condor Kephart and Becker, Condor in my opinion is superior.

  • @jamesmcgee2447
    @jamesmcgee2447 Před 7 měsíci

    👍🏻👍🏻

  • @navigator1372
    @navigator1372 Před 5 měsíci

    Yeah i think that knife is too long. I have bk16, tops bob (way overbuilt), cold steel drop forged hunter, bps hk1 (best at Bushcraft, mora companion (2nd best bushcrafter) joker montes 2, joker corzo, rat 3, and bk 19. The one that hits the best for utilty. For a balance of bushcraft, food prep, batoning kindling, being light, tactical, skinning, feather sticking is the bk19. As a mention. EVERYONE should have a mora companion as for 25 bux you get a great bushcrafter that weighs next to nothing to complement your companion blade. The sharpest blades out of the box are joker and bps. If you like leather look at the joker montes 2 and corzo for 50 bux. The best utility sheaths are the bk 19 and cold steel drop forged hunter ( a bit overbuilt but simple with 52100 steel) i saw a guy baton chop through thick wood with it and it was taking big chunks. Those two sheaths have many lashing points and i think ambidextrous. Still, I think Becker knives should come with g10 or micarta. My favorite one kinda lacks the cool factor a tad

  • @navigator1372
    @navigator1372 Před 4 měsíci

    I'm betting the joker trampero will out slice and out notch both of them. It's the joker kephart. It's stainless steel. Still, there's something to be said about the sturdiness of esee 1095 and the cool look. Trampero has better ergos than both of them. 81 bux on Amazon. Micarta or wood handles and nice leather dangler sheath

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 měsíci

      This will probably be the last new knife I test for a while. My budget is presently stretched thin. Thankfully I have some manufacturers sending me a few new items to test out.

  • @jtoutdoorsadventures6864
    @jtoutdoorsadventures6864 Před 5 lety +2

    Awesome!! Esee makes a nice knife. Great upload. I have been wanting to read that book.

  • @norby0418
    @norby0418 Před 3 lety

    Personally for me 4” is just a bit too short I prefer 4.5 to 5” so I would prefer the BK. I am making a Kephart with a 4.5” blade out of an Old Hickory butcher knife.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 3 lety

      Sounds like it will be a great knife. Would like to see a picture when it's done.

  • @philbossert2790
    @philbossert2790 Před 4 lety

    ML Knives makes a solid Kephart

  • @johnpetry6753
    @johnpetry6753 Před 3 lety

    Micarta scales are now available from KABAR.

  • @user-dh1oj1hi3g
    @user-dh1oj1hi3g Před 7 měsíci

    Also if you are looking for a fire starter try a blast match

  • @mudsslinger
    @mudsslinger Před 3 lety

    I'm not a fan of the scales on the Esse , don't know if there are replacement ones or not

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 3 lety

      Check out my newest video, "Look What's New From the Knife Connection " to see some of there handles for the PR4. Great handles!

  • @rickeybullington68
    @rickeybullington68 Před 4 lety +7

    I d take the Becker allday long .

  • @johnossendorf9979
    @johnossendorf9979 Před 3 lety +1

    I consider both of these and several other "Kephart" type knives. After much research I went with an Ontario Black Bird SK-5 in 154CM. It came
    shaving sharp. Unfortunately I haven't had any opportunity to do much with it yet.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 3 lety +1

      Let me know how you like it.

    • @DerekLand
      @DerekLand Před 3 lety +1

      I have the SK5, and I'm not particularly fond of it. The handle is a nice material but uncomfortable in actual use. For camp use, I also find the extra 1/2" on it over the PR4 to be unnecessary. Lastly, the steel is great but when it needs sharpening you can't do it in the field; the heat treat Esee puts on the PR4 is superb, and mostly only needs a few swipes on the strop to bring the edge back enough for more use. i also found typical Ontario QC evidence: Some come finished great, mine didn't. The components that make the knife are good quality and Blackbird is the sum of it's parts. ...but the finished product of the PR4 is more than the sum of it's parts.
      The Blackbird is a great knife, very capable. It's just not as robust IMO as the PR4.

  • @scatman8963
    @scatman8963 Před 5 měsíci

    such a shame ka-bar went with a flat grind instead of a convex

  • @johnchastain4351
    @johnchastain4351 Před 4 lety

    If the knife does not have a flat grind it is not a Kephart knife. It is just Kephart inspired. Also, it needs to have pinned scales. I have a BK7 that I like. I purchased a BK62, but sent it back because I did not like it.

    • @ochocobushcraft1742
      @ochocobushcraft1742  Před 4 lety

      BK 7 is a great knife! Kephart, or Kephart inspired, the PR 4 along with the BK 16 have become my favorite Bushcraft knives. Thank You for watching!

  • @kevinmorrice
    @kevinmorrice Před rokem

    bk62 wins for me, i just dont like the handle scales on the esee, never liked that kind of extreme texturing

  • @robertphillips3833
    @robertphillips3833 Před 4 lety +2

    Try a Bark River Kephart in CPM 4V 👍🏻 it’s killer

  • @CrimsonSurvival
    @CrimsonSurvival Před 4 měsíci

    It’s a give and take, both knives have their advantages and drawbacks. I like them both. Good video, brother.✝️👍🏻

  • @kentonward97
    @kentonward97 Před 4 lety

    Just have to remember this knife also was his butcher knife

  • @jasonaffeldt7838
    @jasonaffeldt7838 Před 4 měsíci

    👍👍👍.🇺🇲🔪🔥🌲

  • @anthonyp7051
    @anthonyp7051 Před 4 lety

    Just sub to ch
    Thing is once you put a edge after factory it’s done before it began.
    Knives usually get a more keen edge and stronger as you come up. So for the bk to not be performing well this could be from lack of edge skill
    I have several ESSE knives and only a couple Bk’s
    I like your comparison and the biggest thing about the kephart is its drop to center point that is my favorite to use

  • @luisloya1120
    @luisloya1120 Před 16 dny

    Esee is Superior & it looks better. The becker looks like a chinese $15 steak knife.

  • @user-zt1cb6lj5r
    @user-zt1cb6lj5r Před 5 měsíci

    Бомба 💥

  • @evanjack1466
    @evanjack1466 Před rokem

    Just get a Cold Steel Master Hunter, Trail Master and a Pendleton mini hunter….

  • @evanjack1466
    @evanjack1466 Před 10 měsíci

    Stick with cold steel you’ll get better performance at half the price

  • @waves_13
    @waves_13 Před 8 měsíci

    Why is the price (240€) of the Becker so high? It‘s a simple back to the roots knife with no 90• spine, arrived doll, slipper handle, blade too long…hhmmm🤨the Kephart was a poor man’s knife, but well Beckhart is not Kephart…
    I go with the ESEE🫡