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RoseCraft Awanata Folding Knife Reviews

4.1 Rating 12 Reviews
Read Heinnie Haynes Reviews

The RoseCraft Awanata features a 5cm, D2 carbon steel, Wharncliffe blade with a long pull and a brush satin finish. It’s a modern, non-locking, slip joint knife that is legal to carry in the UK. The handle is made from G10 in a choice of six colours with an integrated lanyard hole. It will easily fit in a pocket or survival tin or is small enough to hang round your neck on a chain.
Designed by Andy Armstrong it's a quality little folder that snaps open with a reassuring crispness.

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CF63 3RF

No problem with the nail nick on mine - bought in Feb 24.
Helpful Report
Posted 4 months ago
Lovely small knife. Just grab the blade between thumb and forefinger and pull it open. I don't put my thumbnail into the nail nick. The only thing sharp on my knife is the cutting edge. Fair price too.
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Posted 4 months ago
Again super quality from rosecraft
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Posted 4 months ago
I collect and only buy EDC knives and this little gem is a real bargain. Great material at a great price. The action is smooth and the whole thing has a real tactile quality too it. I've added a lanyard to help find in depths of my bag.
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Posted 4 months ago
What the other's said, and there was blood.
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Posted 4 months ago
From an aesthetic point of view, the knife is really good-looking both open, with very clean straight lines, and shut, with a lot of blade stock above the liners. With D2 you know what you're getting. Unfortunately, the nail nick is way too sharp. It extends out to the back of the blade, so if you ran your thumb or finger along the back you could definitely cut yourself. Even worse, when combined with the seriously strong back spring (at least a six or a seven, which inspires confidence that the blade won't shut on you), if you grab the short blade tightly enough to overcome the resistance, you could do yourself a mischief on the edge of the nick, which is very hard to avoid on the short blade. Without the nick the knife would be great.
Helpful Report
Posted 4 months ago
The knife is aesthetically a beautiful piece of design, attractive (even cute) when open and unique with the amount of blade showing when shut. But it has two peculiarities which combine into a real risk. The backspring is astonishingly strong (6 or 7), so it can't be opened or shut one-handed (at least by me), and the nail nick, which extends into the back of the blade, is wickedly sharp all the way along. This means that people are taking a risk of cutting themselves on the nick itself whenever they open the knife, since one has to grip the blade very tightly and pull on it very hard to overcome the resistance of the spring. There isn't enough blade to avoid the nick. Although I am fond of the knife both open and shut, I consider the transition between the two to be unacceptably hazardous.
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Posted 4 months ago
well made but it is too small for my hand I did not realise that small, the metal finishing is sharp not smoothed at all. but still 3 stars for the
Helpful Report
Posted 4 months ago