Simple Balisong Manipulation
By Phil
Elmore
Open, a balisong knife or
“butterfly knife” is a knife like any other, albeit with a very strong
lock (in that the knife cannot close as long as you grip the
handles). Getting the balisong into the “open” position is
what makes this knife so much fun, however.
The first time I saw a balisong
being “flashed” open was at the school bus stop when I was in sixth
grade. An older boy was opening and closing his brass-handled
butterfly knife. In those days, kids carried things like that
without being sent to concentration camps for reeducation.
While I’m sure he shouldn’t have had the knife, he wasn’t looking to
murder anyone. The same boy was in my Boy Scout troop and
always had a thing for knives, now that I think about it.
I was fascinated by the way the
handles opened and closed. I couldn’t figure out how he did
it without flaying his fingers. At the time I assumed it took
a great deal of skill.
Well, opening a butterfly knife
“the pretty way” (as a young woman I knew in college put it) isn’t
really all that hard, nor is it unsafe if you know what you’re
doing. The first thing you have to do is determine which
of the two handles is the “safe” handle.
On most examples I’ve seen, including my legal Benchmade Trainer, this
is the handle that does not bear the latch.
Manipulating the balisong is a
simple matter of keeping track of the safe handle versus the “live”
handle — the handle facing the blade. When you hold the safe
handle, the opening action of the knife puts the blunt spine of the
knife in contact with your hand, but not the edge of the knife.
There are plenty of books out
there on flipping balisong knives, including Jeff Imada‘s excellent
texts. Presented here are the methods I use most
often. They’re not particularly complicated, but they work.
Simple |
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Grasp the |
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Shift the |
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Flip the live |
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…and let |
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As the safe |
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Snap your hand |
Closing |
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To flip the |
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As the live |
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…and as it |
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When you’re |
Streamlined |
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Release the |
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Flip the live |
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…and letting |
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…and the |
Reverse |
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Grasp the |
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Flip the live |
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…And jog your |
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If you’ve done |
If balisongs are legal where you
live, make sure you take the time to buy or make a trainer.
You must have a dull edge with which to practice. I know a
young lady who permanently disfigured one of her knuckles playing with
a “live” butterfly knife. Train safely and flip actively. >>