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 Fernando, 
	But does it have a carraca? :D Cheers Chris  | 
		
 kronckew, 
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 Cheers Chris  | 
		
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 Fernando, 
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 “If it ain’t got no carraca, It ain’t much of a navaja” :D :D :D :D Cheers Chris  | 
		
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 Oh, Fernando, you are quite something...you don´t forget even to make irony. Well, in my country is not prohibited to have navajas of any size...only to stick them to a neighbor...but authorities are lenient about this...since people is machinegunned on the streets by a dozens every day...a matter of priorities. :D :D So, I am open to receive gifts, specially a navaja de carraca, since I don't have any. Never did. Though I have examined some of them... Regards  | 
		
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		Here's a little one I picked up some years ago. 
	Six inches open; 5 clicks with the last one being the lock.  | 
		
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 I have too much money in sharp things as it is so I'll settle for this. :o  | 
		
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 At least it makes the desired sound when opening. :shrug: 
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 I used to eagerly await each new issue 
		
		
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		Sometimes when I watch Forged in Fire I feel so stupid. I have seen and may even have antique examples of what the smiths are to make - but I never recall having heard the terminology before. While attempting to clear some of the accumulations of modern life in my attic I have found - buried in a stack of old magazines - an important reference to ethnographic arms in popular American culture - the Atlanta Cutlery catalog for 1996! 
	Peripherally relevant to this thread, here are listings for the noisy navaja!  | 
		
 A rather opportune entry, Lee. 
	... And a very 'romantic' means to expose the carraca noise saga; not without a pretty fair dosis of realism, though. Thanks for sharing that paper.  | 
		
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		Here is one I picked up from an "Artes de Toledo" shop in Catalonia about 15 years ago which is a dead ringer in dimensions and weight etc. to the first illustration in Lee`s Atlanta Cutlery catalogue. 
	Miguel  | 
		
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 "Parece que antes había En la venta del Candil Un enano que tenía Voz equivalente a mil". As if the bragging dwarf freqüented a determined Inn, that of Candil. I accidently see that the term appears often in Cervantes work where, for one, Dom Quixote envisions all Ventas as Castles.  | 
		
 Hi Fernando, 
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 Cheers Chris  | 
		
 So sorry Chris. No wonder, Alzheimer at my age :o. 
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