Tramontina Bolo Machete from Baryonyx Knife Company

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This week I picked up a Tramontina bolo machete from the Baryonyx Knife Company. For an extra $6.00, I paid for the "Special Grade" treatment, which involves:

* Flush the scales with the tang
* Finish the edge to a thin convex which is brought all the way to the point
* Grind the spine square for tinder shaving and fire steel striking
* Shape the tip to a fine point (as much as is possible for a bolo!)

Since machetes generally come dull from the factory, I felt that six bucks was a more than reasonable price to have it pre-sharpened, not to mention the handle and spine work.

bolo1.jpg

Baryonyx performs a 7-point checkup on the knives they sell, and the owner also included a P-38 can opener as a gift.

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As you can see, it came with the edge taped over, then packed in a USPS box. It did not come with a sheath, as is typical for most machetes.

When it arrived the bolo was able to shave the hair on my arm, the handle was flush with the tang and based on the smell, it appears that Baryonyx applied a light coat of boiled linseed oil to the wood.

handle2.jpg

handle1.jpg

Specs for the bolo are:

* Overall Length: 19 & 1/2"
* Blade Length: 14 & 1/2"
* Steel: 1070 High Carbon
* Thickness: 1.25mm
* Weight: 11 oz.

After my initial inspection I took it outside to trim back some branches coming over my back fence. It cut through several thin branches with little effort and this thicker one that was overhead took only a few whacks.

bolo2.jpg

Putting a pointed end on a stick, e.g. for use as a spear or in a trap, or for making a tent stake was easy.

The edge handled more delicate work peeling bark, but I found the bolo awkward for this sort of task.

peeling.jpg

After chopping back several branches, putting points on a few sticks, and peeling some bark the bolo could still shave.

Since it required two hands I couldn't get a picture, but I did try using the spine to scrape sparks from a ferro rod, for which it worked well.

Finally, I used it with a baton with the bolo to split some pieces of kindling off a hunk of some well-seasoned and very hard oak.

splitting.jpg

I will probably modify the handle further so that it better fits my hand. I'll also drill a hole and add a lanyard.

The Tramontina bolo will make a good chopper for yard work and bushcraft. Based on how it chopped through hardwood, it would make a fearsome weapon as well. The "Special Grade" treatment from Baryonyx Knife Company was absolutely worth $6.00 to get a razor sharp blade out of the box, along with the reworked spine and handle.
 
What an excellent post! :)

I really like what they did for just $6.00. It'd cost that just to sharpen at most knife shops. What was the basic cost?

Does Baryonx (sp?) have other machetes? Sheaths? Do you have a link?
 
I'm all for $6 well spent.

Except the part about
* Flush the scales with the tang

That should be Standard Equipment on any working tool, right from the factory to prevent blistered hands in the first two hours of use.

And a factory could have done it much better then they did by running it past a course belt sander once on each side and still missing a few places.

Or rounding the rough edges over at least a little!

If I advertised that handle as an 'extra cost feature' on a custom knife, I'd be rode out of town on a rail.

rc
 
RC, I know the owner of Baryonyx; he's a friend. He's a person of great integrity, and runs his company selling low-cost quality tools, based in a state - Maine -- where the economy is very tough. I've purchased three Moras from him, and will buy from him again. His service is exceptional.

I asked him about the machete. Here is his response.

The reason they come rough-ground and blunt and with oversized scales is that a typical field worker in a developing nation makes maybe a few USD a week. Buying a quality machete is a big expense for them, so anything that keeps the cost down that the end buyer can do for themselves is a plus.
 
I got a Tramontina I had over 25 years in my truck. I got a leather sheath for it and I did that this company did when I got mine a belt sander can to some great buff and fluff on a Machete. 6 bucks is a good deal.
 
Baryonyx is into his products and delivers a great item at a very good price in my mind. They also sell some nice soap for the miss'es come Christmas time :D

Kidding aside, I would pay the $6 to get one that was touched up. Yes, I could do it myself but if I split the handle I'm out and time is $$, so $6 for the inspection and some TLC is a buy for me.

As others have said, this is a working tool from a part of the world where people make little $$$ so they are simple. That said, I have found the Tramotina to be the best machetes for the $$.
 
I just checked out the Baryonyx Knife Company website. Looks like a great company with great prices. Will definitely do business with them in the future. Thanks for the 411.
 
I looked at the web site, your machete is $10.50 and I would pay $6.00 to have the thing sharpened plus the detailing.

The material is 1070 steel, from what I recall, that is just right for something that needs toughness.

As has been said, Tramontina machete's are working tools for people don't make a lot of money. I have read accounts of sugar cane cutters who go through a machete a year. They are not going to pay the extraordinary amounts of money American's will pay for machete's with fancy handle materials and exotic steels, which won't last much longer.
 
Vonderek, Ohen got it right upstream here with his praise.

Benjamin is a graduate of U Maine in business and marketing, is very knowledgable about steel, grinds and sharpening; designed and produced (via a second company) his own machete specifically for challenges on Maine farms and woodlands (check out his Baryonyx machete). He's a homesteader growing food, raising horses, rabbits and a son.

We've never met in person -- yet -- but met online on another forum. We correspond regularly online on various forums, email and even phone a couple of times. He's even acted as a business consultant for me a few times. I can say unequivocally he's one of the finest people I've ever "met". He really works hard to find quality products and his customer service is second to none.

I really recommend checking out his stuff. Tell him AStone sent you. ;)
 
Baryonyx is a great outfit. They specialize in knives/axes/machetes with very high quality to cost ratios. Think like Mora, Opinel, Condor, Tramonita, Imacasa, etc....

The guy who runs it is on BFC all the time, and seems to be a real stand-up dude. The exact bolo you got with the $6 special treatment is actually next on my list, so I'm glad to have the positive review! Thank you!
 
As has been said, Tramontina machete's are working tools for people don't make a lot of money.

The only thing I'll take issue with here, is your qualifier. Tram machetes are fantastic working tools at any price. i could pay 3-4x the price and not get a machete that cuts appreciably better.

I bought one of their Latin machetes when i could have spent more, but opted to get the great value of their product. That machete is so good that as posted above, I'm going to get their Bolo next.
 
It IS a great review, Dave. (Hadn't gotten around to saying that here.)

I think I'll buy one of these from Baryonyx when I get to Florida.
 
Does Baryonx (sp?) have other machetes? Sheaths? Do you have a link?

The Baryonx machete seems like a perfect all-around bush craft tool, its not too long or too heavy that you can't carry it on your hip, it will do the work of a machete or the work of an axe... if you try to use some machetes for chopping they sproing on you and now you have a useless boom-a-rang shaped machete.

I think the inventor of the Baryonx has used a lot of different blades in the wilderness and put a lot of his knowledge and experience into creating the Baryonx machete.

It just looks awesome. His prototype is on the bottom.

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I purchased a Gerber Gator to clear mulberry bushes and maple tree saplings and miscellaneous weeds from my mom's property - it was on sale at Menards and I wanted to get going on doing the clearing, but I wish now that I'd gotten a Tramontina.
 
My bush clearing story started with a micro-burst that came through our town and knocked down hundred of trees. We had 12 sugar maples that were about 50 years old and they all snapped or fell over into my parents yard. My folks are in their 80s and my dad had Alzheimer's. I was working full time and could only clear the trees and the branches after work and on the weekends. While I was working on clearing the downed trees I couldn't cut their lawn. There is a field adjacent to my parent's property and part of it is overgrown with mulberry trees and bushes. Well the owner of the field hired a service to clear his lot and they threw any junk they found in my parent's property - in that patch of mulberry where I couldn't see it.

OK, so I finally get the trees and the branches cleared and I try to mow down the mulberry bushes and I find out I can't - the stems by the ground are woody and too thick.

So I go to Menards and get a Gerber Gator they had on sale an start whacking away at the bushes, and that's when I find out that there are scraps of chain-link fence, tomato stakes, broken cinder blocks and chunks of concrete buried in all the foliage.

So I ended up really beating the hell out of that machete - it encountered stuff that it wouldn't normally go up against in the woods or swamp or whatever.

It has some pretty bad nicks in it, I'm not even going to sharpen those out.

I also have a wild rose I need to cut down. Maybe if I'da gone at it when the Gerber was brand new it might have cut it, but now after its beat up the branches just move with the blade and then they bounce back. I'll have to sharpen the Gator or try something else entirely.

I bet that sharpened Tramontina would make short work of that wild rose.
 
Count Zero if you have a mill file laying around I'd imagine you could that machete back cutting pretty quickly.
 
Tram machetes are fantastic working tools at any price. i could pay 3-4x the price and not get a machete that cuts appreciably better.

That has been my experience as well. Having tried many different brands I'd say that the Tram's cut the best and the black pvc(?) plastic handles on Imacasa feel the best to me. A bench grinder and a double cut file will work over a machete's edge in minutes.
 
The Tram bolo is my favorite machete. Actually, I love all of my machetes by them. The bolo is great for woody reeds down in the ditch behind my office that require a clean up twice a year. I have a 14" Latin that is my beater, and when the brush really needs to come down (some of the plants in the ditch are thorny), I bust out the 24" Latin. That one is a lightsaber when you get it whistling through the air:D
 
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