A while ago a friend gave me one of these. He didn’t need it, and thought I might like it.
I get the axe bit. The hole is apparently for opening fire hydrants. (Conveniently, there’s one across the street from me. I should try it for size.) But what’s the deal with the pointy bit? It’s edged, as can be seen in the picture. What’s it (meant to be) used for?
Huh. I’d think a glass breaker would be more of a spike, and a sharpened edge wouldn’t be needed. I suppose it could be used as a lever, getting the end into something and using the rounded part of the blade as a fulcrum; but that doesn’t explain the blade.
Holding the tool as if I was going to strike with the skinny end, the top corner of the blade would make contact with a surface first, rather than the whole face of the ‘blade’.
I looked again, and I mis-interpreted the sheath in the background as a glass breaking pin. :smack:
But, it does all this and more… smash glass, deflate tires, chop through cars, rip tile, egress from a burning building, pry rebar, cut wood, break locks, go through doors and open manhole covers(From Tactical-Life.com)
The former comes with a camo sheath, and the latter comes with a ‘leather/cordura’ sheath? I don’t know. When I was poking around for information before starting the thread I found one page that no longer carried the one in the second link, but did have the other one. There are others that have a ‘lightening hole’ instead of the wrench. It looks like the first one (and mine) is an ‘SP 16’ and the other one isn’t. I have no idea what the differences between the tools are. They look the same to me.
It’s an interesting tool. For small work such as paring down fire wood I generally grab my replica 18th Century tomahawk. I think I have a hatchet around here somewhere too. The Spax is much sharper and would do a better job. But I don’t often have need for a hatchet. It’s not something I’d buy for myself, though I appreciate my friend sending it to me. I don’t even know how the sheath is supposed to be worn. There’s a thigh strap, as you can see in the picture, and a couple of loops that look like they can accommodate a belt. It looks like it should have ‘Alice clips’ (or whatever they’re called, that replaced the LC-1 web gear), but it doesn’t have them.
It would be a nifty thing to have in a survival kit, but I haven’t been flying in a while. Even if I were, there’s no room in a helicopter for a kit. I’d have to be flying fixed-wing (which would be over mountainous, wooded areas) to carry a kit. Camping? Sure, but I have my backpacking stoves so I don’t need to chop wood. Cool thing for the ‘collection’, anyway.
Maybe I could justify it by saying I need it to reduce the size of some of the larger hickory chunks for my smoker? Want to be sure to keep fingers out of the way though.
During the Vietnam-US war era, a friend of mine worked in an Air Force parts crib in Taiwan. He had an interesting collection of expensive and otherwise useless AF gear. He had some ASH Receivers, (wall-mounted ashtrays with sliding covers,) and he had a couple of wicked looking fire axes, similar to yours. He said they were designed for hacking into, or out of, aluminum aircraft. I don’t think his had the pentagonal fire-hydrant hole.
Well, that certainly answered my questions! Good find! It would be a good thing to have if I were still in L.A. in case of an earthquake. Up here, maybe not so much. OTOH, Mt. Baker (volcano) is just about 50 miles away, and the Juan de Fuca tectonic plate seems to be somewhat active and is capable of a ‘megathrust’ quake.