Click to view our Accessibility Statement or contact us with accessibility-related questions
Rike Knife F1 Fixed Blade Knife

Rike Knife F1 Fixed Blade Knife

bookmark_border
Where's the price?
To negotiate the best possible price for our customers, we agree to hide prices prior to logging in.
80 requests
Product Description
Rike Knife’s first fixed blade, the F1 comes after a long line of quality folding knives built to withstand the test of time. For their debut, Rike Knife went big: 10.2 inches to be exact Read More

search
close
CarlChimichanga
0
Dec 16, 2018
It's a Spyderco Tropen as a fixed blade. Plagiarism.
GoodTimes
114
Dec 14, 2018
After recently laughing about ripping other makers designs off on Instagram, Rike can get stuffed far as I'm concerned..... I can see an Ernie Emerson design & Alexy Konygin design had a baby here..... Richard Wu is obviously a great machinist who has little to no idea about making great tools, he's all design, no substance with fat behind the edge blade grinds, this garbage is an overpriced trinket made outta china d2.
GoodTimes
114
Dec 15, 2018
This Richard Wu laughs about ripping off American & European designers and you really think he's using D2 from Crucible rather than locally sourced in China? I'm in no way having a go at Crucible, they make some of my favorite steels ever, great company, I just wanted to warn the uninformed on here that this maker is about as trust worthy as a snitch. Happy for you to disagree, Rike do great machining, but I would rather support better behaving companies from China than this clown who do it just as well if not better without being a parasite.
(Edited)
Axeguy
1372
Dec 17, 2018
GoodTimesBad behavior? From a CNC farm in lawless copycat China? Parasite behavior? China gets a free pass in the global markets. It doesn't seem there's anyone willing to really have a go at making them toe the line in Trade, business ethics (as they thumb their noses at patent holders in Europe and N.America), international law, civil rights, supporting and obeying sanctions, and just being a good global citizen instead of a vast political and diplomatic Jabba the Hutt... I really could write on forever here. Industrial espionage...and old-fashioned boots-on-the-soil espionage. I remember thinking in the last decade or two that maybe it's time for us (Canadians) to stop helping them build their roads and giving them Foreign Aid when they are spending billions to prepare to put someone on the moon... (Yes, they will stick their flag on that big rock.) Now that was a while ago... But they were receiving 'foreign aid' at the same time as they were pumping billions into a space programme. Stuff like that is just craziness and greed. Sorry, I had more to say but I have to get some sleep and let my Huawei phone send an update of me to the Chinese Central Committee or whatever...
lobster
687
Dec 14, 2018
looks aggressive and different. Not sure about the air vents and all the extra milling steps taken at the blade to handle junction right above the finger choil where metal has already been removed. If a blade is going to break outside the tip region, it's going to be at the blade to handle junction. I do like how even with the dual hand guards, the belly of the blade looks like it can still be used on a cutting board without the guard hitting.
Randomsmack
122
Dec 14, 2018
I'm in... looks bad ass.
Xymnslot
380
Dec 14, 2018
Never seen an Emerson Wave feature on a fixed blade knife before.  That's novel...
Omniseed
1972
Dec 14, 2018
Richard Wu seems to like the future-tactical aesthetic, this is very likely a fun project he launched. I wouldn't be surprised if he or others might make an argument for a little guard-prong on a knife like this if it were used as a fighter, though I'm skeptical that this century is one where a melee weapon needs to be designed with other melee weapons in mind.
emptym
66
Dec 16, 2018
XymnslotYeah, I thought it was a folder due to the wave -- until I saw the sheath.
Related Products