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KA-BAR Dozier KA4065, by Thomas Christianson

With a price of only $20 at the time of this writing at the Dozier Knives website [1], the KA-BAR Dozier KA4065 Folding Knife is the best value for an everyday carry (EDC) knife that I know about today.

The knife has a three-inch hollow ground blade made of AUS 8A stainless steel that is 0.11 inches thick. The blade can be deployed with one hand ambidextrously by using a thumb notch. A lockback latches the open blade securely in place. The unlined Zytel handle provides an excellent grip surface. It is light and thin and easy to carry.

The knife was designed by Bob Dozier, and manufactured in Taiwan (Free China.)

If you need a good EDC knife but are short on cash, this is the one to buy.

Background

Back in October of 2023, my review of the KA-BAR Dozier KA4062 [2] was published in SurvivalBlog. That knife has many outstanding features, but its use of a single thumb stud makes ambidextrous one-handed opening impractical. The KA4062 has so many good features, that I was eager to test the similar KA4065, which utilizes a thumb notch instead of a single thumb stud. This allows for ambidextrous one-handed opening, thus overcoming the single greatest drawback of the KA4062 design. So when someone gave me a gift card, I ordered the KA4065. About a week later, a padded envelope arrived via USPS Ground Advantage.

First Impressions

[3] [4]The padded envelope contained a 6 x 1.5 x 1 inch package box made of glossy printed paperboard. The box contained the knife in a bubble wrap sleeve as well as the warranty. The warranty covers the original purchaser only, for the lifetime of the purchaser under normal use, but excludes normal wear and tear. I can understand the exclusion of neglect and improper use including throwing, batoning, opening cans, chiseling, prying, screwdriving, digging, or other “heavy work for which the product was not designed.” But if a lifetime warranty does not cover normal wear and tear, then what does it cover?  I assume just defects in manufacture.

The knife came out of the box shaving sharp, but just barely. A couple of sessions with the AccuSharp Diamond PRO 2 Step Knife Sharpener soon had it up to smooth-shaving standards. One of the advantages of reasonably priced stainless steels like AUS 8 is that they tend to sharpen easily.

The blade opened a little stiffly at first, but it quickly loosened to an appropriate level and then stabilized there.

Testing

I clipped the knife into the left front pocket of my pants, and carried it on and off for a period of five months. During that time, I used the knife for a wide variety of different tasks:

∙ Opening a carton containing a new five-gallon bucket of Sikkens Cetol Log and Siding Stain.
∙ Prying off the lids of one-gallon cans of stain. The knife was not the ideal tool for this job (a screwdriver would have worked better), but it managed to complete the task without breaking or damaging the cans.
∙ Opening a package of ear plugs as I prepared to use an electric pole-saw.
∙ Chopping away wild rose vines growing over the driveway.
∙ Opening a shipping box containing a birthday present our youngest grandson, “Earnest”.
∙ Cutting a length of hose to connect to a pump to help relieve flooding in our younger daughter’s basement.
∙ Opening bags of insulation for our younger daughter’s attic.
∙ Breaking down cardboard boxes to be recycled.
∙ Opening a container of hydraulic fluid to top off a manual hydraulic log splitter that I was selling.
∙ Opening a package of devotional booklets to be placed for distribution in the church foyer.
∙ Untangling a twist tie from a book stand that needed adjustment in my office.
∙ Cutting away wood splinters around a hole that I had drilled.
∙ Cutting a bad spot out of an apple that I was eating.
∙ Removing an orifice reducer from an empty bottle of salad dressing so that I could wash the bottle prior to recycling it.
∙ Puncturing a worn out basketball that would no longer hold air so that it would take up less room in the trash can.
∙ Cutting a broken rope off of my wife “Kari’s” childhood sled so that the rope could be replaced with a better one so that our grandchildren “Cicero”, “Earnest”, and “Ginger” could play with the sled in the snow.
∙ Carving shavings from some sticks to help kindle a fire in the snowy fire pit.
∙ Opening a package containing a tanned cowhide that I received as a Christmas present from SurvivalBlog’s Senior Editor James Wesley, Rawles. I plan to use the cowhide as a backdrop for some of the pictures that I submit with my reviews.
∙ Opening the dog’s monthly dose of heartworm medicine.
∙ Cutting saplings out of the way while moving firewood to a round wood stack.
∙ Opening a bag of birdseed for an elderly couple in our church.
∙ Opening bags of salt to be added to the water softener.
∙ Opening shipping boxes with Christmas presents for our grandchildren, children, and Kari.

An Abrupt End

My testing came to an abrupt end when I loaned the knife to my cousin at a family Christmas party so that she could open a package. After opening the package, she set the knife down on a table. Her elderly boyfriend, who is in the early stages of dementia, picked up the knife and imagined that it was his. My daughter, “Rivka”, tried to rescue the knife for me, but relented when he insisted that the knife was his. I let him keep it because I did not want to embarrass him or my cousin.

One of the advantages of a reasonably-priced knife is that it is less painful if the knife is lost, broken, or needs to be sacrificed to preserve the dignity of a loved one.

Keepers and Gifts

I did not feel too bad about allowing my cousin’s boyfriend to keep the knife, since I would have given the knife away, anyway. I review more EDC knives each year than I can possibly put to good use, so I pass them on to others. As good a knife as the KA-BAR Dozier KA4065 is, it was not good enough to displace one of the eight EDC knives that I have designated as “keepers.” I would like to tell you a little bit about the keepers, to date:

The combined manufacturer suggested retail prices of those eight knives is a total of $909.86. If you wanted eight EDC knives and did not want to spend more than $900, you could buy eight of the KA-BAR Dozier KA4065 for a total of only $160. The KA4065 is not quite as versatile as the Skeletool, doesn’t have scissors like the SD, is not as beautiful as the Lion, does not have as good of a strength to weight ratio as the Marilla, does not deploy quite as pleasingly as the Bear Swipe IV or the Kershaw Link, does not fit the hand quite as well as the TDC 001, and doesn’t resemble a fish like the 61125. But for most practical, everyday tasks, it will work just as well.

About Zytel

Zytel is trademark owned by the Celanese Corporation of Irving, Texas. It refers to a number of thermoplastic polyamide formulations in the nylon family. The Zytel that is commonly used in folding knife handles is reinforced with fiberglass. It is highly abrasion-resistant and impact-resistant.

Conclusions

[12] [13]The KA-BAR Dozier KA4065 Folding Knife is an outstanding value for an EDC knife. It is easy to open with one hand using either hand. It is easy to sharpen. It is corrosion resistant. It is thin and light. The warranty is nothing to brag about, but it is inexpensive enough that you could afford to replace the knife several times before approaching the price point of many similar knives.

I will repeat my words from the introduction to this review: if you need a good EDC knife and don’t have a lot of cash, the KA-BAR Dozier KA4065 is the knife to buy.

Disclaimers

Silver Stag, Case, Bear and Sons, and Tyrant CNC all provided me with samples of their knives for earlier reviews. Tortoise Gear provided me with a sample of their Firefly Fire Starter. I tried not to allow the kindness of these vendors interfere with the objectivity of this review, and I believe that I have succeeded. I did not receive any other financial or other inducement to mention any vendor, product, or service in this article.