Cold Steel CS-21TTL Talwar Folding Knife
In the 19th century, the British Empire was bent on devouring as much of the Indian subcontinent as possible, seizing control with firepower and bayonets. However, when the British tried to conquer the Sikhs and other military tribes, they were decapitated by a terrible Indo-Persian sword, the Talwar, and even their arms and legs were lost! Its sharp, broad, curved blade stopped the atrocities of the British in many battles!
Now, nearly two hundred years later, Cold Steel has harnessed the terrifying cutting power of one of the world's most famous swords to create the ultra-destructive Talwar Folding Knife.
Designed by renowned custom knife maker Andrew Demko and Cold Steel president Lynn C Thompson, the Talwar has a very wide blade (a full 2 inches wide.)
To match the Talwar's sharpness and lethality, it is equipped with an extraordinary handle. Machined and molded from G10 board, its textured and chiseled pistol grip handle features strategic finger grooves ensuring a comfortable grip and secure use. To protect your precious fingers from harm with this folding knife, the Talwar features the proven Tri-Ad Super Back Lock.
Talwar also took reference from ZT’s quick-opening design and paired Andrew Demko’s two-handed thumb plates on the blade. The knife can be quickly drawn through the edge of the pocket, and it is in your hand at lightning speed! This is the scarier part of Talwar!
Brand: American Cold Steel
Item number: CS-21TTL
Structure: Tri-Ad Super Back Lock
Total length: 230 mm
Blade steel: S35VN, surface steel is exquisitely polished
Blade hardness: 60HRC
Blade thickness: 3.8 mm
Blade length: 95 mm
Blade cutting length: 88mm
Handle length: 136 mm
Handle material and processing: G10 handle, CNC processed. 5 colors
Weight: 143g
Color box packaging, with double back clip
Cold Steel CS-21TTLTalwar Folding Knife In the 19th century, the British Empire was bent on devouring as much of the Indian subcontinent as possible, seizing control with sheer firepower and bayonets. However, when the British tried to conquer the Sikhs a
Feedbacks (0)