King Poppa Choppa
Knives Illustrated|November 2017

Tops Knives’ El Chete Sets a New Standard for Cleavers

Waysun Johnny Tsai
King Poppa Choppa

The buzz was off the charts. This year, like every year, fans and collectors of TOPS Knives gravitate toward their booth at the SHOT Show and BLADE Show, hoping to peek at their newest edged tools. And the excitement was overwhelming at both the shows and online. El Chete, one of their newest offerings, almost shut down the internet with all the chatter.

This is TOPS Knives’ first offering to ever feature their new Acid Rain finish and sandwiched Micarta scales. The size, balance, and aesthetics of the blade, combined with two different sheath options, has had the TOPS Knives Users Facebook page filled with so many positive posts from anxious collectors, it just made sense to write this article.

TOPS Knives set out to create a new knife that could cause a ton of destruction. By the looks and feel of their new El Chete, they weren’t playing around.

First Impressions

The El Chete is a big knife. If you are looking for a small camp knife, this is not the knife for you.

TOPS Knives’ current president and wizard lead blade designer, Leo Espinoza, did not hold back on this 17.5-inch beast of a blade. Leo is a big guy, so I can see why he went the direction he did with this big, beefy blade.

The knife boasts a 0.25-inch thick, 1095 high-carbon steel blade that is a full foot long. It has thick scales that were designed to make it feel and chop similar to a small axe. While the knife is large, it weighs just under 2 pounds, so it’s not impossible to imagine having this knife as a permanent piece of kit for one’s bug-out bag or hiking pack. Adding this knife would eliminate the additional need and weight of having a camp axe or tomahawk.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2017-Ausgabe von Knives Illustrated.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der November 2017-Ausgabe von Knives Illustrated.

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