I'm from Sweden and living 600 kilometers north of Mora and i'm still 250 kilometers under the polar circle. I'm shocked what the Mora kniv kost in the US 😙 Every hand worker does wear a Mora knife and throw them away when they are dull.. I like the high end line from Mora but this guy has always a German Solingen hand made Puma fixed blade or folder on his belt 😆🤣 Hell no i will take out or skin a moose with a Mora knife... The Jagd Nicker, Four star fixed blade, as edc a four star folder. Those are my favorites but i own almost all models like the White hunter, bowie, hunters pal, Falkners heil, Forster nicker, Weidblad set, Auto messer, Skin master. Rabbiter, you name it. Great video buddy 👌Enormous respect for your knowledge and presentation. Cheers!
They are about $20 US if you look around. That's an hours pay or less for most people. We don't however treat knives as disposable in the US for cultural reasons.
@@simonacerton3478Yes, but in the Nordics, every kid grew up wood carving or whittling with a Mora or Fiskars. Most workplaces and homes have a knife in every drawers. The good knives that you carry are moreso were given as gifts and not for work.
@@ZaryaTheLaika A certain subset of Americans more European if that makes sense to you were like this. Knives galore Latinos are rather famous for them as well.
@@simonacerton3478 Yeah! I have a crapload of knives from my dad because he always buy a new knife for his workshop everytime he leaves the house. They're not very good quality. Just your basic 5 euros knives that you find at home hardware stores and gas stations.
Thx Desert Dog for this Mora history! I’ve been knife making and rehandling Mora 510/511s for years. It’s actually cheaper to buy the whole knife with sheath (cut the handle off) vs buying the blade blanks directly. Amazing steel either with the carbon or Sandvik! A few other cheap Mora type copies to check out would be the Marttiini 571 and the Ahti Finman series. These are Finnish takes on the Mora 510 and a step up in my opinion but still in that $15 range. However the 510 is really what started it all and was made even more popular in the bushcraft community by Ray Mears- I guess he made it cool! Crazy thing is Mora actually stopped making the 510 for awhile in favor of just the 511. Enough customer complaints came in that they brought them back in a black plastic handle at first. Thank you again for this content I learned a lot!
The sheath of the little orange knife has two holes in the bottom. Now I guess every outdoors man recognizes that they serve several purposes. They allow water to drain out, the sheath can be used as a modified bellows to direct air to a fire and maybe even used as a whistle for rescue purposes. Actually well designed
A very well-thought out video. You and I have come to similar conclusions. I like either a flat grind, or high saber grind for slicing and general purpose work. I have plenty of scandi knives for wood.
17:44 - bizarre bushcraft communities like the finger groove since those are considered as children's knives, not woodworking knives. Woodworking knives have no fingerguards on them
Most handymen, carpenters or anyone working in construction and so on, has a Mora or similar Swedish made knife. I use the Mora for everytime I go hunting. Easy to sharpen to a razor and very similar properties to Victorinox out of Switzerland. Very good steel that is easy to clean and maintain and they sharpen extremely well.
👍 Excellent brief summary of knives made in area of Mora, Sweden. I have owned a variety of “Mora” knives over the years (Classic #2 being my favorite), none have ever failed me as I use them for knife tasks, not axe, hammer, or pry bar tasks. I absolutely agree with that like all tools these knives excel at some things and are adequate at other things. Having said that the people from the Scandinavian countries have successfully used these style knives in a demanding wilderness for years. Is the Mora Classic #2 the perfect filet knife? No. Is it the perfect game processing knife? No. Can you accomplish anything you need a knife to do in the wilderness with this knife? Yes. I really like the content and format of your “review” videos. Thank you for sharing your thoughts based upon real life use and experience.
I have the Mora Classic No. 2. And two Mora Heavy Duty Companion knives, in carbon steel. And I use them in my kitchen more then any other knife. My Classic No. 2, has a red handle.
Thanks for an interesting video. My first knife was a Mora Classic and a Classic No. 3 have been my favorite for the last 50+ years. Unfortunately they reduced the blade length in the last iteration so now I have a Pathfinder for more heavy duty use. The Pathfinder also have a thicker blade than the classic which is welcome, but unfortunately not full tange like the classic.
Used or more like abused the Mora2000 in the army for years. They weren't the best but did job's that i would hesitate to do with a 200-300$ knife and thst as it's nicely explained in the video is the strong point of Mora knifes good quality (not the best) for a fair price so you dont fret about using them for anything. Thanks for a great vid.
Morakniv - Best knives for the money- truly unbeatable value. They make one for virtually every occasion. I use them for fishing, hunting, camping and even reno work. PS. Mora makes cork handled knives, fillet knives, flat tipped chisel knives, fish scaler knives, and my favorite beater - the Robust! Man, you just can collect 20 of them and you still won’t break the bank! Lastly, if you wish, you can throw the Mora on a whetstone and get it to an actual zero (“scandi”) grind. It’ll cut like an absolute beast, and may in fact be the sharpest knife you ever owned. Although edge stability does get compromised, so you’ll need to use it accordingly.
I’m late to the Mora party. Just bought a Kamsbol stainless here in the UK for £30.00. Got it to replace a knife that I lost. New knife has an orange handle. Hope to use it to dress a deer soon.
You are full of information! You also always know what you are talking about.. which I appreciate! It's very easy to watch your videos from beginning to end. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us 😁
I own many of the Mora knifes. I’m a three knife carry person. Most of the time I use the Mora in combination with another usually larger knife, like a 12” machete. The Garberg and companion HD are the two I carry the most, these are really good knifes, when used as intended no problems, learned a lot from this video
Dog chief, keep it going. So few of us left from the old timers. I didn't realize they'd be gone and we'd be the old guys. I appreciate you, and here we go. Hope the kids are listening.
A good friend gifted me a Mora Companion to try out. I use Green River sheath knives and always will. But I have no complaints about the Companion at all. It really could fill all my needs in a belt knife! So where does it go? In the cubby right next to my truck driver’s seat. I consider it a place of honor! 👍😂 PS 100%agree on the great handle! 👍👏
I did pick up their Ash Lok as a sort of collector's piece and I like the look of it quite a bit. Can't say I would recommend it though in terms of practicality.
I'm a Swede. I have always considerd a Mora a throw away knife, a knife for people that really dont even like knives enough to care about them. They are cheap and no one even bothers to resharpen them here in their home country of Sweden. No they are not bad, but ''the Mora crowd'' fosters some what of an anti-knife attitude. Your not man enough if cant do with just a Mora! It wasnt long ago that Fällkniven made the F1 for the Swedish Air Force, before that the Pilots that flew expensive Fighter planes just had a redhandled Mora as their survival knife! I have since learned to like and use the Mora, send me your adress and will ship you the best of the ''Moras'' that isnt even a Mora. Its a Hultaforss! Its a Mora on Steroids!
I have multiple Frost and Erickson knives. I don't use them for woodwork so I have put standard edges on them. I have used them on game and I don't care for the edge. Marttiini makes as good of a knife for the same money. I have two KJs with heavy Jagaren knives which are not your standard Mora. They were hunting knives as well as a fishing knife. The fishing knife is a 301 and the hunting one is a 1701. They also produced a version of the Canadian belt knife. All of that said and done the Green River is a better inexpensive bushcraft blade. The Canadian belt knife is as well. Mors used the Moras because they were cheap knives for students.
10:12 - well, yes, Mora syndrome is why Finns say the puukko is a tool, not a weapon because you don't want a fingerguard on woodworking knife since its easierto choke up for finer, detailed works. Most of the knives sold woth fingerguards are for combat or for children.
@@wizardofahhhs759 I was making a joke about the Puukkojunkkaris (1820s to 1880s). Obviously hunters and fishermen want fingerguards to prevent cutting themselves while skinning and descaling.
Scandi grinds are perfect for fileting fish, as long as you baton correctly 😅. I have a companion that I worked over on a belt sander. It's a fairly useful knife now.
I think the 511 uses C75 without heat treat. Anyway, I didn't manage to throw a spark with any Mora. I used the same flint that I use with my fire steel.
interesting video... Mora does make a good knife, but as with most knives, they were never meant to to be a do-all blade. Mora knives shine at crafting and carving wood which is what they were intended to do. I am a firm believer in ... Use the right tool for the job.
32:46 - and Fiskars (in addition to Rapala). Mora has a really difficult time comprting with Fiskars if we're talking about household name and cutthroat price-point competitions
If you baton. Place the knife in the wood enough to let go if possible. gently hold the handle and start batoning with your hand balancing, not holding. These knives aren't for splitting logs but relatively small work. I've never had one break. Of course I always have a small pruning saw and a large cold steel knife.
If this interests anyone: I have (for sale) a Mora that has Frost's on both sides of the handle. Lanyard hole. Laminated steel. Frost is on the knife blade. Mora Sweden is on the sheath. Handle and sheath are black. The finger guard is pronounced as mentioned toward the start of this video. Any info would be greatly appreciated.
Moras are great knives for the money, but if I'm going to rely on a knife for survival, I will have a Mora AND a heavy duty survival knife. I do own a Garberg, which I like, but I still prefer to carry the Fallkniven A1 for survival situations.
31:16 - to be honest, everyone's who use a Mora for skinning carry like 2 or 3 of them and hate sharpening knives in the field. That's one thing they never tell you the videos when they badmouth hunting knives. And that's fine, guides are honest they carry 3-5 Moras if you ask them about that. Just the social media influencers dont disclose that bit of information
16:57 - Swedish military still issue Moras as general utility knives. Fällkniven is prefereded for survivalist military drills. I forget who manufacture combat knives.
I personally own nine Morakniv knives. Three of them are Companion design. A stainless steel Companion is used daily in the kitchen. As to using any knife to split timber is foolish in my opinion. That's what axes and hatchets are made for. 😏
Use frost hoof knives.the little one you show looks looks like muzzle loaders timing knifes. Have stick thick as ball, insert patched ball into stick use knife to trin 4 or five att a time, or trim att muzzle granny most used kitchen knife for people who still cooking ..haha..
26:56 - eh, we use puukko and Mora interchangeably because Mora in common-speak is so common. But, yeah, dont call a Fiskars knife a Mora if you're talking about Fiskars the company, etc instrad of a generic knife as a colloquiallism
So what you're sorta saying is.... find a full tang, CPM-Magnacut steel, in an acceptable length, with a useful blade shape, sheathed in a quality made kydex, and turn a blind eye to all the impostor blades on the market. 😆
mora knives are ugley the new ones the fulltang whit wooden scale are made from recycled steel they dont say what kind of steel.and the red ones whit wooden handle the carbon versin the tang rust i the handle ,water runs in to the handle ,mora is a hype because they are cheap and you get what yo pay for.no mora for me never.
In work in the metals industry. 95% of everything made these days is "recycled steel". Mentioning that is a stupid marketing ploy by Mora, because almost all knives are made with recycled steel. I clearly stated the grades of steel in this video, which is information freely shared by Mora.
I'm from Sweden and living 600 kilometers north of Mora and i'm still 250 kilometers under the polar circle. I'm shocked what the Mora kniv kost in the US 😙 Every hand worker does wear a Mora knife and throw them away when they are dull.. I like the high end line from Mora but this guy has always a German Solingen hand made Puma fixed blade or folder on his belt 😆🤣 Hell no i will take out or skin a moose with a Mora knife... The Jagd Nicker, Four star fixed blade, as edc a four star folder. Those are my favorites but i own almost all models like the White hunter, bowie, hunters pal, Falkners heil, Forster nicker, Weidblad set, Auto messer, Skin master. Rabbiter, you name it. Great video buddy 👌Enormous respect for your knowledge and presentation. Cheers!
They are about $20 US if you look around. That's an hours pay or less for most people. We don't however treat knives as disposable in the US for cultural reasons.
@@simonacerton3478Yes, but in the Nordics, every kid grew up wood carving or whittling with a Mora or Fiskars. Most workplaces and homes have a knife in every drawers. The good knives that you carry are moreso were given as gifts and not for work.
@@ZaryaTheLaika A certain subset of Americans more European if that makes sense to you were like this. Knives galore
Latinos are rather famous for them as well.
@@simonacerton3478 Yeah! I have a crapload of knives from my dad because he always buy a new knife for his workshop everytime he leaves the house. They're not very good quality. Just your basic 5 euros knives that you find at home hardware stores and gas stations.
@@ZaryaTheLaika Fiskars? Hey You either rich or a Finn you have a Fiskars ;)
Thx Desert Dog for this Mora history! I’ve been knife making and rehandling Mora 510/511s for years. It’s actually cheaper to buy the whole knife with sheath (cut the handle off) vs buying the blade blanks directly. Amazing steel either with the carbon or Sandvik! A few other cheap Mora type copies to check out would be the Marttiini 571 and the Ahti Finman series. These are Finnish takes on the Mora 510 and a step up in my opinion but still in that $15 range. However the 510 is really what started it all and was made even more popular in the bushcraft community by Ray Mears- I guess he made it cool! Crazy thing is Mora actually stopped making the 510 for awhile in favor of just the 511. Enough customer complaints came in that they brought them back in a black plastic handle at first. Thank you again for this content I learned a lot!
Excellent lecture, Professor Dog! Need a Mora knives! Really enjoy the series! Thanks!
Have been waiting for this video for years and wasn‘t disappointed. Thanks for the great videos!
Congratulations!!! Just the best video of Morakniv Knives!!!! Thanks a Lot!!!!!!
Really enjoying these knife videos..hope we can see more
The sheath of the little orange knife has two holes in the bottom. Now I guess every outdoors man recognizes that they serve several purposes. They allow water to drain out, the sheath can be used as a modified bellows to direct air to a fire and maybe even used as a whistle for rescue purposes. Actually well designed
Like Christmas in January. Thanks for another superb video.
A very well-thought out video. You and I have come to similar conclusions. I like either a flat grind, or high saber grind for slicing and general purpose work. I have plenty of scandi knives for wood.
17:44 - bizarre bushcraft communities like the finger groove since those are considered as children's knives, not woodworking knives. Woodworking knives have no fingerguards on them
This and your Green River knife video are really great. So glad I caught your Is Bushcraft Stupid video and subbed. Cheers.
Nice video from brasil,here we love moras and tramontina
Good one DD. Best Scandi-grind backstory I’ve had. Good info.
JD
Great presentation. 👍
A Mora Scout was my first knife 43 years ago.
It was already used when I got it. I have no idea how old it is.
I still carry it on occasion.
Great video. I watched all of it and would say it will stand as a great reference for knife nuts. Thanks again D.D.
Most handymen, carpenters or anyone working in construction and so on, has a Mora or similar Swedish made knife. I use the Mora for everytime I go hunting. Easy to sharpen to a razor and very similar properties to Victorinox out of Switzerland. Very good steel that is easy to clean and maintain and they sharpen extremely well.
👍 Excellent brief summary of knives made in area of Mora, Sweden. I have owned a variety of “Mora” knives over the years (Classic #2 being my favorite), none have ever failed me as I use them for knife tasks, not axe, hammer, or pry bar tasks.
I absolutely agree with that like all tools these knives excel at some things and are adequate at other things.
Having said that the people from the Scandinavian countries have successfully used these style knives in a demanding wilderness for years.
Is the Mora Classic #2 the perfect filet knife? No. Is it the perfect game processing knife? No. Can you accomplish anything you need a knife to do in the wilderness with this knife? Yes.
I really like the content and format of your “review” videos. Thank you for sharing your thoughts based upon real life use and experience.
I have a mora companion, it’s a great knife. Then again I’m not an outdoorsman. I use it for mundane tasks around the house like opening boxes.
I have the Mora Classic No. 2. And two Mora Heavy Duty Companion knives, in carbon steel. And I use them in my kitchen more then any other knife. My Classic No. 2, has a red handle.
I got a few myself; damn good knives for the $$$
Thanks for an interesting video. My first knife was a Mora Classic and a Classic No. 3 have been my favorite for the last 50+ years. Unfortunately they reduced the blade length in the last iteration so now I have a Pathfinder for more heavy duty use. The Pathfinder also have a thicker blade than the classic which is welcome, but unfortunately not full tange like the classic.
Used or more like abused the Mora2000 in the army for years.
They weren't the best but did job's that i would hesitate to do with a 200-300$ knife and thst as it's nicely explained in the video is the strong point of Mora knifes good quality (not the best) for a fair price so you dont fret about using them for anything.
Thanks for a great vid.
Great history 😊thanks
Hi from Canada thanks for the great videos...btw it's pronounced..co-han-ski😀
I like the carbon steel because because I can sharpen it up to razor on the bottom of my coffee mug. I’m no bush crafter , just a carpenter from maine
Fantastic video. Thank you 🇨🇦
Jolly good show old chap! Top hole content! Spiffing!
Morakniv - Best knives for the money- truly unbeatable value.
They make one for virtually every occasion. I use them for fishing, hunting, camping and even reno work.
PS.
Mora makes cork handled knives, fillet knives, flat tipped chisel knives, fish scaler knives, and my favorite beater - the Robust!
Man, you just can collect 20 of them and you still won’t break the bank!
Lastly, if you wish, you can throw the Mora on a whetstone and get it to an actual zero (“scandi”) grind. It’ll cut like an absolute beast, and may in fact be the sharpest knife you ever owned. Although edge stability does get compromised, so you’ll need to use it accordingly.
Mora 2000 i think really took their popularity forward , and i like that one much .,
I’m late to the Mora party. Just bought a Kamsbol stainless here in the UK for £30.00. Got it to replace a knife that I lost. New knife has an orange handle. Hope to use it to dress a deer soon.
You are full of information!
You also always know what you are talking about.. which I appreciate! It's very easy to watch your videos from beginning to end.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience with us 😁
I own many of the Mora knifes. I’m a three knife carry person. Most of the time I use the Mora in combination with another usually larger knife, like a 12” machete. The Garberg and companion HD are the two I carry the most, these are really good knifes, when used as intended no problems, learned a lot from this video
I have a classic number one that absolutely loves rust. Lol
Love these lessons DD! 👍🏻
Dog chief, keep it going. So few of us left from the old timers. I didn't realize they'd be gone and we'd be the old guys. I appreciate you, and here we go.
Hope the kids are listening.
Right buddy 👍
A good friend gifted me a Mora Companion to try out. I use Green River sheath knives and always will. But I have no complaints about the Companion at all. It really could fill all my needs in a belt knife! So where does it go? In the cubby right next to my truck driver’s seat. I consider it a place of honor! 👍😂 PS 100%agree on the great handle! 👍👏
I did pick up their Ash Lok as a sort of collector's piece and I like the look of it quite a bit. Can't say I would recommend it though in terms of practicality.
Extremely informative, thank you. I have a Garberg
The Eldris sheath can be put on backwards to extend the handle.
@@LoreTunderin I never thought of that!
Excellent video!
“For people who enjoy LARPing in the woods…” 😅🙌
I'm a Swede. I have always considerd a Mora a throw away knife, a knife for people that really dont even like knives enough to care about them. They are cheap and no one even bothers to resharpen them here in their home country of Sweden. No they are not bad, but ''the Mora crowd'' fosters some what of an anti-knife attitude. Your not man enough if cant do with just a Mora! It wasnt long ago that Fällkniven made the F1 for the Swedish Air Force, before that the Pilots that flew expensive Fighter planes just had a redhandled Mora as their survival knife!
I have since learned to like and use the Mora, send me your adress and will ship you the best of the ''Moras'' that isnt even a Mora. Its a Hultaforss! Its a Mora on Steroids!
Can’t go wrong with a Mora knife worth every penny.
If you want to cut wood for fire use don’t use a knife use a hatchet.
I have multiple Frost and Erickson knives. I don't use them for woodwork so I have put standard edges on them. I have used them on game and I don't care for the edge. Marttiini makes as good of a knife for the same money. I have two KJs with heavy Jagaren knives which are not your standard Mora. They were hunting knives as well as a fishing knife. The fishing knife is a 301 and the hunting one is a 1701. They also produced a version of the Canadian belt knife. All of that said and done the Green River is a better inexpensive bushcraft blade. The Canadian belt knife is as well. Mors used the Moras because they were cheap knives for students.
10:12 - well, yes, Mora syndrome is why Finns say the puukko is a tool, not a weapon because you don't want a fingerguard on woodworking knife since its easierto choke up for finer, detailed works. Most of the knives sold woth fingerguards are for combat or for children.
So children engage in combat in Sweden!?
@@wizardofahhhs759 I was making a joke about the Puukkojunkkaris (1820s to 1880s). Obviously hunters and fishermen want fingerguards to prevent cutting themselves while skinning and descaling.
Using a knife to baton wood is like using a suppository as a lollipop in my opinion
Scandi grinds are perfect for fileting fish, as long as you baton correctly 😅. I have a companion that I worked over on a belt sander. It's a fairly useful knife now.
Another first class video but if you forgive me, you missed the third of the Mora knife makers. The one that did not join the merger - E Jonsson.
Greetings from Sweden. The longer variant with wood handle nick name is pundarlans Junkie lance in English
Nice knifes , , I prefer the helle , , but both make,s are excellent , 👍 ..
Sharing this one too.
Thank you D.D.!
I have one without the finger protector. With the slick handle,I don't trust it. I use it for a letter opener.
I have a beautiful Erik Frost stag handled personal (dress) bayonet. It came with a steel sheath.
I like Mora knives in the kitchen. I haven't taken one camping yet. I think my Victorinox does the job. For what I need.
I think the 511 uses C75 without heat treat.
Anyway, I didn't manage to throw a spark with any Mora.
I used the same flint that I use with my fire steel.
interesting video...
Mora does make a good knife, but as with most knives, they were never meant to to be a do-all blade.
Mora knives shine at crafting and carving wood which is what they were intended to do.
I am a firm believer in ... Use the right tool for the job.
32:46 - and Fiskars (in addition to Rapala). Mora has a really difficult time comprting with Fiskars if we're talking about household name and cutthroat price-point competitions
If you baton. Place the knife in the wood enough to let go if possible. gently hold the handle and start batoning with your hand balancing, not holding. These knives aren't for splitting logs but relatively small work. I've never had one break. Of course I always have a small pruning saw and a large cold steel knife.
If this interests anyone: I have (for sale) a Mora that has Frost's on both sides of the handle. Lanyard hole. Laminated steel. Frost is on the knife blade. Mora Sweden is on the sheath. Handle and sheath are black. The finger guard is pronounced as mentioned toward the start of this video. Any info would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Moras are great knives for the money, but if I'm going to rely on a knife for survival, I will have a Mora AND a heavy duty survival knife. I do own a Garberg, which I like, but I still prefer to carry the Fallkniven A1 for survival situations.
31:16 - to be honest, everyone's who use a Mora for skinning carry like 2 or 3 of them and hate sharpening knives in the field. That's one thing they never tell you the videos when they badmouth hunting knives. And that's fine, guides are honest they carry 3-5 Moras if you ask them about that. Just the social media influencers dont disclose that bit of information
16:57 - Swedish military still issue Moras as general utility knives. Fällkniven is prefereded for survivalist military drills.
I forget who manufacture combat knives.
Marttini rocks. Mora, the name brand, is too costly versus quality. Carried puuko knives for decades.
I personally own nine Morakniv knives. Three of them are Companion design. A stainless steel Companion is used daily in the kitchen.
As to using any knife to split timber is foolish in my opinion. That's what axes and hatchets are made for. 😏
I've never understood the batoning of wood, use your axe or, a saw. A knife is not meant to process firewood.
What are the two side by side shotguns in the background of your video? Loved the mora content, too. Thanks
@@altoncahoon182 They are part of a video that will air next month. on vintage SxS's
I have a mora and a out door edge literally the only two knives you really need lol
Use frost hoof knives.the little one you show looks looks like muzzle loaders timing knifes. Have stick thick as ball, insert patched ball into stick use knife to trin 4 or five att a time, or trim att muzzle granny most used kitchen knife for people who still cooking ..haha..
26:56 - eh, we use puukko and Mora interchangeably because Mora in common-speak is so common. But, yeah, dont call a Fiskars knife a Mora if you're talking about Fiskars the company, etc instrad of a generic knife as a colloquiallism
So what you're sorta saying is.... find a full tang, CPM-Magnacut steel, in an acceptable length, with a useful blade shape, sheathed in a quality made kydex, and turn a blind eye to all the impostor blades on the market. 😆
@@exothermal.sprocket No, that is what you're saying.
@@desertdogoutdoors1113 That's right, pardon.
First, I guess
mora knives are ugley the new ones the fulltang whit wooden scale are made from recycled steel they dont say what kind of steel.and the red ones whit wooden handle the carbon versin the tang rust i the handle ,water runs in to the handle ,mora is a hype because they are cheap and you get what yo pay for.no mora for me never.
In work in the metals industry. 95% of everything made these days is "recycled steel". Mentioning that is a stupid marketing ploy by Mora, because almost all knives are made with recycled steel. I clearly stated the grades of steel in this video, which is information freely shared by Mora.
I hope you take better care of your knives than your grammar.