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Gravity knife

A gravity knife is a knife with a blade contained in its handle, and that opens its blade through the force of gravity.[1] This mechanism of opening is fundamentally different from the switchblade, which extends its spring-propelled blade automatically upon the push of a button, switch, or fulcrum lever.[1] The main purpose of gravity opening is that it allows opening and closing to be done one handed, in situations where the other hand is occupied. Hence, historically they have been issued to parachutists to cut off caught lines, such as lines tangled in trees, a major potential use of the gravity knife [citation needed].

The gravity knife uses a button, trigger, or fulcrum lever to release the blade from both the open and the closed positions, and may use a side-folding or telescoping (out-the-front, or OTF) blade. While most military gravity knives utilize a locking blade design, other types may not mechanically lock open but rely instead upon friction to wedge the rear section of the blade against the interior of the handle.[2] Factory-made gravity knives have various types of buttons, triggers, and fulcrum levers, which usually are used to release the blade from both the open and the closed positions.

Design and operation edit

Flieger-Kappmesser / Luftwaffe Gravity Knife (LGK) edit

 
German Luftwaffe Fallschirmjäger-Messer or air force paratrooper knife

One of the most recognizable gravity knives is the World War II-era Flieger-Kappmesser (lit.'flyer's cutting knife'), which utilizes a 4 in (10 cm) telescoping (OTF), gravity-propelled locking blade. First produced in 1937, the often so called Fallschirmjägermesser (lit.'paratrooper knife') was initially issued to German flight crews and paratroops, primarily for the purpose of cutting a trapped parachutist from his rigging in case he landed with a tangled parachute, or became entangled in trees or in the water with the shroud lines.[3] The spike was used to untie knots while packing the parachutes. Luftwaffe air crew members used the knife to cut themselves out of their harnesses or cut through the aluminum hull of the aircraft after a crash landing. Though not intended for use as a fighting knife in the first place, the LGK was introduced to the 1st Skijäger Division and SS units on the Eastern Front to be used primarily as a close combat weapon from 1944 on.[4]

The Flieger-Kappmesser uses a sliding blade inside a metal gripframe, which was originally fitted with smooth wood scales. The blade itself is a relatively blunt spear-point, and the profile is flat ground, tapering to a utility edge. To open the blade, the user points the knife downwards while flipping up the fulcrum-style operating lever, allowing gravity to draw out the blade to its fullest extent. Releasing the lever locks the blade into position. The LGK may also be opened by flipping the blade release lever while flicking the wrist holding the knife, causing the blade to extend. The LGK was also equipped with a folding marlinspike or awl. Primarily intended for untangling rope knots, it was also used as a prying tool or to fix jammed weapons. The spike does not lock when opened and was never intended to be used as a combat weapon.

There are two principal types of wartime-era Flieger-Kappmesser with altogether 10 known variations. The Type I LGK (three manufacturers, five WWII variations) has wood scales (handle), was made from 1937 to 1943, and unlike successive models has no takedown capability. The Type II LGK (two manufacturers, five WWII variations) is the same knife, but with takedown features, and was produced from 1943 until 1945 and then again from c. 1950 until 1965.[4]

After the end of World War II, the newly organized West German Bundeswehr placed new orders with German cutlery manufacturers for a postwar version of the Kappmesser for issue to the Army´s airborne forces and tank crews. The West German Luftwaffe abandoned the gravity knife concept completely and purchased completely different rescue knives including a shroud line cutter. The initial Type III "trap door" gravity knife, made from 1955 to 1961, did not prove to be very reliable and thus, the original WWII Type II design was reintroduced until it was finally replaced by the early Type IV knives in about 1968. The Type IV LGK is very similar to the WWII-production Type II takedown knife, but features plastic polymer instead of wooden scales and was made by WMF, OFW and Eickhorn from 1972 to 1984. They were issued to Bundeswehr soldiers until 2017. The third West German post-war model is the Type V LGK, initially named AES79 and still today produced under the designation LL80 (1979–present) by Eickhorn. The LL80 is smaller, has fewer parts and is more cost-effective to produce than earlier Flieger-Kappmesser.[5][4] It was procured by the Swiss Air Force and issued to their Dassault Mirage pilots in 1983. These knives are marked AES83 and bear the number of the aircraft of the metal head.

On the other side of the Iron Curtain, in the German Democratic Republic, WWII gravity knives were refurbished and re-issued to the paratroopers and pilots until the existing stock was gone. In the early 1960s two companies then produced an East German version of the Type I knives. They were then used until the early 1970s.[4]

Ibberson gravity knife edit

After British forces had captured numbers of Type I Flieger-Kappmesser, the British government approached George Ibberson & Co. of Sheffield, England, a knife and cutlery manufacturer, and requested production of a British version of the German Luftwaffe Gravity Knife for the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and other clandestine warfare units.[6] Under the initial wartime contract, George Ibberson & Co. made 500 gravity knives for issue to the SOE and other special forces. These Sheffield gravity knives had smooth wood or textured plastic scales, but were otherwise identical in features and operation to the Type I Flieger-Kappmesser, with a locking gravity-deployed blade and a folding rigging spike or awl. In the hands of British SOE agents, the Sheffield gravity knife was considered to be a secondary combat weapon. In addition to the knife blade, SOE close combat instructors found that the folding rigging spike was useful for silent killing of sentries by opening the carotid artery on the neck.[7][4]

'False gravity' and non-gravity knives edit

Some folding or telescoping knives that can open their blades by force of inertia or gravity were not intended or advertised by the manufacturer to do so. Knives that will lock their blades open, but do not have any closed position lock device are referred to as "false" gravity blades.

 
Folding "false" gravity knife

The illustration shows the internal parts of a 1960s Japanese import 'false' gravity knife. Other knives may be considered to be 'false' gravity knives, including certain lock-back and liner lock folding knives that will not lock a blade in both open and closed positions.

After the passage of the Switchblade Knife Act in the U.S. in 1958, it was discovered that some U.S. businesses were importing folding stiletto knives without spring mechanisms that did not have a pronounced blade heel (internal surface) in the pivot area allowing the longer 11 and 13 in (28 and 33 cm) bladed models to easily flick open.[3] Modern (post 1965) folding stilettos imported or distributed in the U.S. now have blade heels that are intentionally pointed and ratchet against the lockback mechanism, preventing inertia opening.

Other knives commonly mistaken for gravity knives include the automatic OTF knife, the switchblade and the butterfly knives (or balisong), the sliding knife, penny knife, and occasionally even common folding hunting knives such as the Buck 110 Folding Hunter.[8]

Other edit

 
Conversion knife

The 'conversion' gravity knife consists of a standard folding knife fitted with after-market modifications.[9] The knife pictured does not lock closed, and is thus classed as a 'false' gravity knife. It can still be opened manually without touching the toggle switch. The addition of the toggle, which is attached to an internal bellcrank-arm, will lift the lockback mechanism to allow the blade to swing more easily.[9]

Legality edit

In some countries, such as the United Kingdom, Canada, and in only certain U.S. states, a gravity knife is proscribed under the law as a prohibited weapon, with attendant criminal penalties. Other laws may criminalize the ownership, sale, importation, or carrying of a gravity knife upon one's person, either concealed or unconcealed. In the United States, some state criminal codes prohibit either the ownership or the carrying of gravity knives, either by name or by including a functional description of their opening mechanisms. Other state criminal codes bar gravity knives by redefining them variously as switchblades or butterfly knives.[3][8][10] Local jurisdictions including cities and counties may also restrict the ownership or carrying of gravity knives.[11]

In a few jurisdictions, such as Colorado[12] and New York City,[13] courts have periodically attempted to classify ordinary lock-blade folding knives with a blade that may be opened by centrifugal force (normally, using a flicking motion of the wrist) as a gravity knife, thus making the knife's owner subject to the same criminal penalties imposed for illegal possession of a gravity knife.[9][14] The New York statute banning gravity knives has been declared "unconstitutionally vague" by a federal District Court in March 2019.[15] New York State legalized the possession of gravity knives on May 30, 2019[16] but New York City retains its ban on public transport.[17][18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Langston, Richard (2001). Collector's Guide to Switchblade Knives: An Illustrated Historical and Price Reference. Boulder, Colorado: Paladin Press. p. 224. ISBN 1-58160-283-9.
  2. ^ Flook, Ron (1999). British and Commonwealth Military Knives. Howell Press Inc. p. 256. ISBN 1-57427-092-3.
  3. ^ a b c (PDF). 7 (2). American Knife and Tool Institute. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-14. Retrieved 2008-07-24. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e Bruening, Jan-Peter (2019). Luftwaffe Gravity Knife – Weapon, Tool, Tradition (4th ed.). Stuttgart.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Pattarozzi, Mack A. (2006), Luftwaffe Gravity Knife: A History And Analysis of the Flyer's And Paratrooper's Utility Knife, Schiffer, ISBN 0-7643-2419-5, 978-0-7643-2419-2. 'Takedown' refers to the knife's capability of being quickly disassembled into its component parts without tools.
  6. ^ Ladd, James D.; Melton, Keith; and Mason, Peter (1988). Clandestine warfare: weapons and equipment of the SOE and OSS. London: Blandford. ISBN 0-7137-1822-6, 978-0-7137-1822-5. p. 29. These British SOE gravity knives are not the same knives as the standard British Army soldier's and sailor's clasp pocketknife, which featured a short, thick marlinspike.
  7. ^ Thompson, Leroy (1985). Survival/Fighting Knives. Paladin Press. ISBN 0-87364-347-X, 9780873643474. p. 76.
  8. ^ a b Muldoon, Gary (2006). "Is Butterfly Knife a Gravity Knife?". 5 (4). Monroe County, New York: Conflict Defender Office. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. ^ a b c Dick, Steven (1997). The Working Folding Knife. Stoeger. p. 280. ISBN 978-0-88317-210-0.
  10. ^ Nappen, Evan(2003), "Are Switchblades Sporting Knives", Sporting Knives 2003: 60-65, ISBN 0-87349-430-X
  11. ^ "Knife Laws" (PDF). Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  12. ^ Blackburn, Roger. "Colorado Knife Laws". KnifeUp.com. Retrieved 4 July 2013.
  13. ^ Campbell, Jon (7 October 2014). "How a '50s-Era New York Knife Law Has Landed Thousands In Jail". Village Voice. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  14. ^ Kertzman, Joe, Sporting Knives: Folders, Fixed Blades, Pocket, Military, Gent's Knives, Multi-Tools, Swords, Krause Publications, ISBN 0-87349-430-X, 9780873494304 (2002), pp. 60-62
  15. ^ "Federal Judge Rules New York's Dumb 'Gravity Knife' Law Is Unconstitutionally Vague". Reason.com. 2019-03-28. Retrieved 2019-04-13.
  16. ^ "NYS Assembly Bill A05944/S04863 enacted as Chapter 34 of 2019". Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  17. ^ "Knife Ban and Vagueness Case at Supreme Court Conference". Reason.com. 2019-06-10. Retrieved 2019-08-05.
  18. ^ "Gravity Knife History and Law". Knifehero.com. 2022-08-09. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  19. ^ "All About Gravity Knife Mechanism and Legality". Retrieved 19 November 2023.

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A gravity knife is a knife with a blade contained in its handle and that opens its blade through the force of gravity 1 This mechanism of opening is fundamentally different from the switchblade which extends its spring propelled blade automatically upon the push of a button switch or fulcrum lever 1 The main purpose of gravity opening is that it allows opening and closing to be done one handed in situations where the other hand is occupied Hence historically they have been issued to parachutists to cut off caught lines such as lines tangled in trees a major potential use of the gravity knife citation needed The gravity knife uses a button trigger or fulcrum lever to release the blade from both the open and the closed positions and may use a side folding or telescoping out the front or OTF blade While most military gravity knives utilize a locking blade design other types may not mechanically lock open but rely instead upon friction to wedge the rear section of the blade against the interior of the handle 2 Factory made gravity knives have various types of buttons triggers and fulcrum levers which usually are used to release the blade from both the open and the closed positions Contents 1 Design and operation 1 1 Flieger Kappmesser Luftwaffe Gravity Knife LGK 1 2 Ibberson gravity knife 1 3 False gravity and non gravity knives 1 4 Other 2 Legality 3 See also 4 ReferencesDesign and operation editFlieger Kappmesser Luftwaffe Gravity Knife LGK edit nbsp German Luftwaffe Fallschirmjager Messer or air force paratrooper knifeOne of the most recognizable gravity knives is the World War II era Flieger Kappmesser lit flyer s cutting knife which utilizes a 4 in 10 cm telescoping OTF gravity propelled locking blade First produced in 1937 the often so called Fallschirmjagermesser lit paratrooper knife was initially issued to German flight crews and paratroops primarily for the purpose of cutting a trapped parachutist from his rigging in case he landed with a tangled parachute or became entangled in trees or in the water with the shroud lines 3 The spike was used to untie knots while packing the parachutes Luftwaffe air crew members used the knife to cut themselves out of their harnesses or cut through the aluminum hull of the aircraft after a crash landing Though not intended for use as a fighting knife in the first place the LGK was introduced to the 1st Skijager Division and SS units on the Eastern Front to be used primarily as a close combat weapon from 1944 on 4 The Flieger Kappmesser uses a sliding blade inside a metal gripframe which was originally fitted with smooth wood scales The blade itself is a relatively blunt spear point and the profile is flat ground tapering to a utility edge To open the blade the user points the knife downwards while flipping up the fulcrum style operating lever allowing gravity to draw out the blade to its fullest extent Releasing the lever locks the blade into position The LGK may also be opened by flipping the blade release lever while flicking the wrist holding the knife causing the blade to extend The LGK was also equipped with a folding marlinspike or awl Primarily intended for untangling rope knots it was also used as a prying tool or to fix jammed weapons The spike does not lock when opened and was never intended to be used as a combat weapon There are two principal types of wartime era Flieger Kappmesser with altogether 10 known variations The Type I LGK three manufacturers five WWII variations has wood scales handle was made from 1937 to 1943 and unlike successive models has no takedown capability The Type II LGK two manufacturers five WWII variations is the same knife but with takedown features and was produced from 1943 until 1945 and then again from c 1950 until 1965 4 After the end of World War II the newly organized West German Bundeswehr placed new orders with German cutlery manufacturers for a postwar version of the Kappmesser for issue to the Army s airborne forces and tank crews The West German Luftwaffe abandoned the gravity knife concept completely and purchased completely different rescue knives including a shroud line cutter The initial Type III trap door gravity knife made from 1955 to 1961 did not prove to be very reliable and thus the original WWII Type II design was reintroduced until it was finally replaced by the early Type IV knives in about 1968 The Type IV LGK is very similar to the WWII production Type II takedown knife but features plastic polymer instead of wooden scales and was made by WMF OFW and Eickhorn from 1972 to 1984 They were issued to Bundeswehr soldiers until 2017 The third West German post war model is the Type V LGK initially named AES79 and still today produced under the designation LL80 1979 present by Eickhorn The LL80 is smaller has fewer parts and is more cost effective to produce than earlier Flieger Kappmesser 5 4 It was procured by the Swiss Air Force and issued to their Dassault Mirage pilots in 1983 These knives are marked AES83 and bear the number of the aircraft of the metal head On the other side of the Iron Curtain in the German Democratic Republic WWII gravity knives were refurbished and re issued to the paratroopers and pilots until the existing stock was gone In the early 1960s two companies then produced an East German version of the Type I knives They were then used until the early 1970s 4 Ibberson gravity knife edit After British forces had captured numbers of Type I Flieger Kappmesser the British government approached George Ibberson amp Co of Sheffield England a knife and cutlery manufacturer and requested production of a British version of the German Luftwaffe Gravity Knife for the Special Operations Executive SOE and other clandestine warfare units 6 Under the initial wartime contract George Ibberson amp Co made 500 gravity knives for issue to the SOE and other special forces These Sheffield gravity knives had smooth wood or textured plastic scales but were otherwise identical in features and operation to the Type I Flieger Kappmesser with a locking gravity deployed blade and a folding rigging spike or awl In the hands of British SOE agents the Sheffield gravity knife was considered to be a secondary combat weapon In addition to the knife blade SOE close combat instructors found that the folding rigging spike was useful for silent killing of sentries by opening the carotid artery on the neck 7 4 False gravity and non gravity knives edit Some folding or telescoping knives that can open their blades by force of inertia or gravity were not intended or advertised by the manufacturer to do so Knives that will lock their blades open but do not have any closed position lock device are referred to as false gravity blades nbsp Folding false gravity knifeThe illustration shows the internal parts of a 1960s Japanese import false gravity knife Other knives may be considered to be false gravity knives including certain lock back and liner lock folding knives that will not lock a blade in both open and closed positions After the passage of the Switchblade Knife Act in the U S in 1958 it was discovered that some U S businesses were importing folding stiletto knives without spring mechanisms that did not have a pronounced blade heel internal surface in the pivot area allowing the longer 11 and 13 in 28 and 33 cm bladed models to easily flick open 3 Modern post 1965 folding stilettos imported or distributed in the U S now have blade heels that are intentionally pointed and ratchet against the lockback mechanism preventing inertia opening Other knives commonly mistaken for gravity knives include the automatic OTF knife the switchblade and the butterfly knives or balisong the sliding knife penny knife and occasionally even common folding hunting knives such as the Buck 110 Folding Hunter 8 Other edit nbsp Conversion knifeThe conversion gravity knife consists of a standard folding knife fitted with after market modifications 9 The knife pictured does not lock closed and is thus classed as a false gravity knife It can still be opened manually without touching the toggle switch The addition of the toggle which is attached to an internal bellcrank arm will lift the lockback mechanism to allow the blade to swing more easily 9 Legality editSee also Knife legislation In some countries such as the United Kingdom Canada and in only certain U S states a gravity knife is proscribed under the law as a prohibited weapon with attendant criminal penalties Other laws may criminalize the ownership sale importation or carrying of a gravity knife upon one s person either concealed or unconcealed In the United States some state criminal codes prohibit either the ownership or the carrying of gravity knives either by name or by including a functional description of their opening mechanisms Other state criminal codes bar gravity knives by redefining them variously as switchblades or butterfly knives 3 8 10 Local jurisdictions including cities and counties may also restrict the ownership or carrying of gravity knives 11 In a few jurisdictions such as Colorado 12 and New York City 13 courts have periodically attempted to classify ordinary lock blade folding knives with a blade that may be opened by centrifugal force normally using a flicking motion of the wrist as a gravity knife thus making the knife s owner subject to the same criminal penalties imposed for illegal possession of a gravity knife 9 14 The New York statute banning gravity knives has been declared unconstitutionally vague by a federal District Court in March 2019 15 New York State legalized the possession of gravity knives on May 30 2019 16 but New York City retains its ban on public transport 17 18 See also editButterfly knife Rampuri Pantographic knife often incorrectly referred to as a Paratrooper Knife 19 References edit a b Langston Richard 2001 Collector s Guide to Switchblade Knives An Illustrated Historical and Price Reference Boulder Colorado Paladin Press p 224 ISBN 1 58160 283 9 Flook Ron 1999 British and Commonwealth Military Knives Howell Press Inc p 256 ISBN 1 57427 092 3 a b c AKTI Approved Knife Definitions PDF 7 2 American Knife and Tool Institute 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 14 Retrieved 2008 07 24 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e Bruening Jan Peter 2019 Luftwaffe Gravity Knife Weapon Tool Tradition 4th ed Stuttgart a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pattarozzi Mack A 2006 Luftwaffe Gravity Knife A History And Analysis of the Flyer s And Paratrooper s Utility Knife Schiffer ISBN 0 7643 2419 5 978 0 7643 2419 2 Takedown refers to the knife s capability of being quickly disassembled into its component parts without tools Ladd James D Melton Keith and Mason Peter 1988 Clandestine warfare weapons and equipment of the SOE and OSS London Blandford ISBN 0 7137 1822 6 978 0 7137 1822 5 p 29 These British SOE gravity knives are not the same knives as the standard British Army soldier s and sailor s clasp pocketknife which featured a short thick marlinspike Thompson Leroy 1985 Survival Fighting Knives Paladin Press ISBN 0 87364 347 X 9780873643474 p 76 a b Muldoon Gary 2006 Is Butterfly Knife a Gravity Knife 5 4 Monroe County New York Conflict Defender Office a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Dick Steven 1997 The Working Folding Knife Stoeger p 280 ISBN 978 0 88317 210 0 Nappen Evan 2003 Are Switchblades Sporting Knives Sporting Knives 2003 60 65 ISBN 0 87349 430 X Knife Laws PDF Retrieved 4 July 2013 Blackburn Roger Colorado Knife Laws KnifeUp com Retrieved 4 July 2013 Campbell Jon 7 October 2014 How a 50s Era New York Knife Law Has Landed Thousands In Jail Village Voice Retrieved 7 October 2014 Kertzman Joe Sporting Knives Folders Fixed Blades Pocket Military Gent s Knives Multi Tools Swords Krause Publications ISBN 0 87349 430 X 9780873494304 2002 pp 60 62 Federal Judge Rules New York s Dumb Gravity Knife Law Is Unconstitutionally Vague Reason com 2019 03 28 Retrieved 2019 04 13 NYS Assembly Bill A05944 S04863 enacted as Chapter 34 of 2019 Retrieved 2019 05 31 Knife Ban and Vagueness Case at Supreme Court Conference Reason com 2019 06 10 Retrieved 2019 08 05 Gravity Knife History and Law Knifehero com 2022 08 09 Retrieved 2022 08 09 All About Gravity Knife Mechanism and Legality Retrieved 19 November 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gravity knife amp oldid 1216715124, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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