Ganzo Firebird G7533 Knife Review

Ganzo Firebird G7533 Knife Review

The Ganzo Firebird G7533 folding knife offers an Axis-style lock and has carbon fiber scales. This beefy knife should stand some abuse, too!


Official Specs

Here’s a link to the official product page.

Package and manual

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The knife arrives in a plain cardboard black box.  There are some printing, and facts about the knife but generally, it’s pretty simple

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As usual, GearBest will include their own inventory sticker on the box.

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Form

Look

The Ganzo is clearly, absolutely striking.  The carbon fiber handles. The blue anodized metal accents.  The titanium-coated blade.  Even the clip looks great on this knife.  The blade shape is really not my favorite – it has a bit too much belly and point, but still looks good enough.  I do not care for the Firebird logo on the side of the blade.

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Sound (Open/Close/Lock)

Opening this knife begins with a bit of a click from the axis lock – as it pushes back from closed.  Then the blade locks up snugly (ever time thus far!) with a grainy but positive thunk.  It’s all positive and clear, but it’s not as clean as some of my other knives.  Definitely not as clean as the Mini Grip.  Closing is almost the same in reverse, with the added sound of depressing the axis lock.  Out of the box it needs oil (at least, maybe even cleaning), so all that can be heard in the action.  Then the blade drops into the scales with just the right sound.  And it’s snug in it’s home.

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Build and Feel

First off I’m an absolute huge carbon-fiber fan.  The look of this knife had me from the start (I actually for this one specifically once GearBest asked me to do a knife.) In hand, the knife feels great.  While the textureless carbon fiber scales have little grip on their own, the bare edges of those carbon fiber scales do provide grip.  There’s no choil on the blade but in the handle of the knife there’s a place for the index finger – the rest of the knife is long enough for the remaining 3 fingers (if you have that many left).  It’s also clearly meant to be held this way, as the jimping is on the handles and liners, and not the blade itself (ie, no jimping on the blade!).  For right-handed users, the clip as it’s installed will fit right into the palm of the hand, and it fits there nicely.  Anyway, the clip is reversible, requiring three Torx screws to be moved with the clip.  Speaking of the clip, it’s a big paddle-style clip with a largemouth.  Also quite springy, and tight.  The liners are full metal liners.  I found the blade to be perfectly centered on my sample.

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Oh one thing I really want to mention – something I’ve never seen in a thumbstud before.  The thumbstud rolls… it’s not static.  So as you deploy the blade, the thumbstud rolls to help you. It helps but really it’s a big marginal to say it makes a huge difference.  Probably doesn’t; is cool.

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The coating on the blade is called “titanium” coating.  I haven’t had any issues with flaking or scratching, but at the very least be aware that the blade is coated.  I believe there are other versions of this knife with uncoated blades.

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Carry

As stated, there’s a reversible clip for tip-up carry.  Tip-up is the only option.  Really the axis lock gets in the way of the other option.  There’s also the included pouch with the firebird logo, but I can’t imagine anyone ever using those….  But it’s there, included!  The knife carries a bit big – it’s long at 12cm closed.  However it’s not especially thick, so it still carries well.  (Really compared to some of the flashlights I EDC, this isn’t bad at all.

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Size

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Vibe

Probably already gave it away, but this knife has a great vibe.  While it could be too large for carry in some jurisdictions, it’s still worth owning for some heavier jobs.  If your job allows something this big, it’s still great, since the carbon fiber and blue accents set it apart and even maybe make it “gentlemanly.”

That said, keep the firebird logo pointed away from anyone who might see.  It adds nothing whatsoever to the knife.  (Unless that’s your thing, in which case…. good on you.)

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Cut

I am surprised to say that this Ganzo is quite sharp.  It’s not evenly sharp – the tip-to-middle half is much sharper than the middle-to-handle half.  The good half slices paper easily.  The bad half cuts it, but jaggedly.  I do expect this knife would sharpen up nicely.

Value

If you’re in need of a larger bladed knife, this is a decent one for the money.  If you’re great at tweaking the action, then this is a great value for the money.  I found it to be an excellent user, and I’d easily recommend it at ~$15.

In other words, I’d recommend this one as a great beater knife.  At the very least, it’ll look stunning while taking the beating.

Go buy the Ganzo Firebird here!

Notes

  • Credit due to u/BPsPRGuy for this post, which is where I got formatting ideas.  I like strong formatting… if you’ve read my flashlight reviews you know that. 🙂
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