


🪓 Own the Legend: Swing into history with the Cold Steel Viking Battle Axe!
The Cold Steel Viking Battle Axe is a modern reinterpretation of the classic two-handed Viking war axe, featuring a 10-inch hand-sharpened 1055 carbon steel blade with distinctive dual 'horns' and a robust 48-inch American hickory handle. Weighing 4.6 pounds, it balances power and control for both display and practical use. Designed for enthusiasts who appreciate authentic craftsmanship and are willing to customize for peak performance, this axe comes with a lifetime warranty, making it a durable and iconic tool for collectors and outdoor adventurers alike.


| ASIN | B006YBXXCG |
| Best Sellers Rank | #85,924 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #90 in Camping Axes & Hatchets |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Blade Length | 10 Inches |
| Blade Material | Carbon Steel |
| Brand Name | Cold Steel |
| Color | Viking Great Axe |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 2,459 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00705442009344 |
| Handle Material | Hickory,Steel,Wood |
| Head Type | Battle |
| Included Components | Axe |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 48"L x 10"W |
| Item Height | 3 inches |
| Item Type Name | Cold Steel, Viking Axe |
| Item Weight | 7 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | GSM LLC |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | lifetime |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Chopping Wood, Splitting Wood |
| Style Name | Modern |
| UPC | 705442009344 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
A**R
Great kit for the money
I’m giving 5 stars because CS delivered everything promised in the description and the materials are of good quality. That being said, you can use it out of the package as a recreational camp axe but you will need to further seat the handle before tightening the set screw. Not my first CS axe so I put it in a vice head up and close the vise till the wood handle is just clear with the head resting on the top lip of the vice jaws. Then I pound the handle into the head with a hard rubber mallet before locking the set screw. The head can’t ever leave the handle when swinging, the handle taper is bigger than the hole in the head. All it can do is fall down towards your hands if it ever comes loose. Regardless this is not a commercial tool, don’t expect that from it. I wanted to emulate a historical dressing for my axe, to do this I had to sand the sealer off the shaft and the terrible grey coating on the head that they use for rust protection. One this was done I used an espresso stain on the handle, three coats with wipe off method. It won’t get very dark. If you want a little darker try ebony or true black stain. I wrapped the top half with 10mm leather using the pull under method for the ends. For the grip I used 3mm braided leather. I wanted the braided leather handle portion to be longer but believe it or not this is 10 yards. For the head I used a wire wheel on a pedestal motor to remove the finish. I used 120 grit sandpaper for touch up. One I had it stripped I cleaned it with lacquer thinner and then alcohol using gloves to keep finger oils off (super important) I then used a wipe on steel blackener from Amazon and stayed off of the cutting edge. If you have shiny spots afterward you didn’t strip or clean well enough. I used the cheapest bluish/green blackening solution. I may still carve runes in between the leather cross cross areas using a steel bit in a dremel for precision. I’ll write the rune in sharpie, dremel over it till the sharpies gone and q-tip some stain in. In the end a little extra money for a period piece look but a much better axe than the junk Ragnar 2x4 handle baby axes out there. Some think the handle is too long, wrap the handle grip where you want it and you always have a two hand swing option which I like allot. (Or cut it down first if it’s a deal breaker)
A**.
Explanation For The American Tomahawk Company
If you can hang an ax, you already have what you need to bring this tough-as-nails powerhouse to life. However, before the review, I would first like to address a common (and somewhat frustrating) gripe that I've been seeing about this item and it's Cold Steel sisters over and over and over. And that gripe is this: "THIS AX SAYS AMERICAN TOMAHAWK COMPANY AND IT HAS TIAWAN STAMPED ON IT!!! SO HOW IS IT AMERICAN?! COLD STEEL DIDNT MAKE THIS! THEY TRICKED ME!!!" The answer to this review-muddling mystery is that the original "American Tomahawk Company" went out of business some time ago, and no longer exists as it's own company in the normal sense. The name, however, was was purchased by Cold Steel, and now exists as something of a sister-company. The nerve-striking American Tomahawk Company stickers we are seeing on these tomahawks and axes are, unfortunately, is a clever marketing ploy which allows Cold Steel to advertise an "American" product while still outsourcing their manufacturing to Tiawan. In short, American Tomahawk Company = Cold Steel THE REVIEW: Though it can't be denied that Cold Steel and it's founders are (at best) an organization of questionable moral aptitude, it also can't be denied that they make exceptional cutting tools. This is especially so with their axes and tomahawks. However, this is a textbook case of "you get what you pay for". Ranging from $30 to $60+, these hand tools are extremely hard to beat for their price points. The drawback for such affordability? Though they're marketed as "combat ready", it's allong the same concept as how a brick or large rock is "combat ready"; if you swing it and make contact, the person on the hard end of it might not be too worried about details of craftsmanship or quality control. Realistically, after you chop through all of the marketing and whatnot, these are project pieces. This ax is to be considered roughly-refined stock consisting of high-quality materials that require basic craftsmanship to bring out it's true beauty and potential. It comes sharp-ish, the handle will be machine-pressed into the eye, resulting in the curled shavings I like to call "eyelashes", there will be an annoying set screw involved, and there's a chance you might get poor grain orientation, or a warped handle. But the ax head IS top-notch steel, despite being produced in Taiwan (which is very high quality steel compared to "cheap Chinese crap", another issue I could address all together). And the handle IS high-quality, well-cured hickory. If you want a ready-for-battle, true-to-the-lumberjack, razor-sharp, instantly-perfect ax, then you're in luck, all you need is $160-$250. If you want all of that in a $40-$50 price range, please, please tell me if you find it. Because this is not that item. This item is for the person who is either willing/able to bond with a new companion through some TLC and a little know-how, or who is willing/able to have it done for them.
K**N
Good, but leaves some more to be desired.
Good quality, the only issue is the handle is somewhat cheap feeling, however, it has decent weight, great birthday gift for viking lovers (and cutting their cake!) not intended to cut wood, but great for ornamentation or light yard work for stubborn weeds. It does not come with a sheath, just a plastic edge protector. The axe blade polishes well, though the "made in Thailand" took hours of sanding to go away fully
A**S
Very Viking, Much Axe
Viking Axe is good. Battle much, very hard. Battle opponents, cold steel big, heavy. Noice.
A**T
U must learn how to sand the handle to fit the axe head
Like all cold steel’s tomahawks & most of their historical axes, these handles have to be sanded and hand momentum fitted. They don’t tell people this & include a screw that temporarily fixes the ax head in place but will destroy the handle fairly quickly w use-especially if u don’t fit the handle and use the screw. The alignment will be off as well if not properly fitted and the screw is skipped. That’s why so many people say to throw that useless screw away in the comments. It seems like a good thing to a novice but will mess up ur handle quickly, even if u fit the head properly, but much worse if u don’t. Look up how to fit a tomahawk handle properly before attempting this or any hawks w wood handles by cold steel. This not being known is the main reason for negative reviews along w fairly poor quality control. Guess they get so many repeat customers they think everyone knows, but first timers often have no idea and get upset when the axe or hawks head is loose. Make sure u know what ur doing first, by watching so YouTube vids or whatever, then if there’s still issues u can send it back if u got a dud. Most complaints are just people who aren’t used to momentum secured hawks and axes. My first one came and it was super dull, too dull to sharpen by hand, and the handle was too thin at the top to fit properly. Sent it back for a replacement & the second ones handle fit perfectly, and was close enough to sharp that I could finish it by hand. The steel on these is heat treated/ tempered well, has multiple layers of heat treat & is surprisingly hard. Quality control isn’t the best on these and pretty much all are at least a minor project of fitting the handle and sharpening, but are great quality for the $ and as good as many of the far more expensive ones once u take care of that, and customize the head and handle if u want something that looks good on a wall. They come pretty plain but the bearded ax has a great shape & has a lot of potential for customization as a wall hanger or camping tool, zombie killer or whatever u want it to do. You can easily spend 2-4 times or more on a cheaply built wall hanger, so these are great and tend to perform well. Just requires a little more work out the gate than most. CRKT has a lot of the same issues and charges 2-3 times as much, although some of their stuff is prettier out of the box
A**6
Good for a project axe
Good axe head, but the whole axe is poorly finished and assembled. Got this to customize, so I got what I paid for. However, I wish it did not have the screw and I wished that it came in two pieces. The screw is a metric size or something and cannot be easily removed. Stripped it immediately. If you are looking for a ready to use axe, this is NOT a good choice. But if you are like me and intend on refinishing both the handle and the axe head, its a decent buy for the price. For anyone wondering why I say it is not ready to use: the handle is rough, with splinters, and the part where the head is attached needs to be re-sanded due to splinters where they forced the head up the handle. The blade is also not very sharp even for an axe, and the axe head finish is poorly applied and uneven. Again, none of this matters for my purpose, since I will be stripping, refinishing, and regrinding the edge anyway, but if you are not able to, or don't want to work on it, then you will likely be disappointed.
M**.
It’s feels like a toy or display item
This axe is not the best axe. it’s more like a display item. Use caution when using it as it does not stay and could seriously hurt someone. It does not have the proper handle to hold its own blade. The blade will come off . I had to sharpen it to make it work and adjusted the handle to make safe. If you’re not a tool person who cannot modify it to work, It’s not worth the time nor entertainment spent correcting it’s flaws the Poor handle design, poor sharpness. It says American but the blade says a different country. A few good things this it’s light weight and balanced. After some modification to make It safe to use i start to do work only for crafting and debarking trees. Money not well spent. My original honest review was removed with excerpt photos showing its flaws. This is an edit, please see photos my original photos showed how poor it was but because it removed I could only show modifications to it to make it work.
A**R
Can only speak for mine, which is great even without considering the price.
First is that this is a battle axe and not a tomahawk or wood chopping axe, it's blade geometry is meant for slashing (not chopping)and stabbing against flesh, bone and thin wood(a shield) and not chopping thick branches or logs, it bites in deeply on every hit and gets stuck on almost every hit which is also why it shouldn't chop against an opponent( please don't be stupid and use this against ANYTHING alive). After reading so many reviews about the head being loose, the haft being garbage and needing to be sanded or whatever I got supplies to deal with these along with the axe. They were a waste of money as the head was secured tightly with or without the screw( which in my opinion is there only for shipping purposes), the shaft was perfectly straight and had the grain going the right way( in line with the axe blade) and had no coating on the head or shaft at all. The only modification I made was purely aesthetic, a simple darker stain and the axe looked and preformed great. The blade came with a usable edge but I still sharpened it until it was shaving sharp, which is honestly too sharp for a wood axe( it risks damaging the edge if it's too fine due to the tremendous force an axe can hit with which is far greater than a knife or even a sword) but I use this axe for martial arts training and "trick" cutting against water bottles and other human analog targets, not repeatedly against cured hard woods. All in all the axe was an absolute steal at $35.00, it had none of the problems the other reviewer's had, looks and feels great, has decent battle axe head geometry(which again is not that of a wood chopping axe),is light and well balanced and is made from quality materials that make it rugged and durable. It's worth far, far more than the asking price and I would definitely buy it again. I'm on a super tight budget and 35.00 is actually a lot of money to me for something that turns out to junk, my particular axe is a great item and not " for the money it's good", just good( I have yet to see something those axes that cost four or five or even ten times the price do that this one can't, $12.00 worth of wood stain and gun blue and it even looks as good as those ones). Not saying those other reviewer's were wrong, maybe cold steel improved their qc or maybe I just got lucky but there is no way anyone could say the one I got had any faults. As far as the head goes it's affixed to the shaft like a tomahawk, meaning the end of the shaft flares out slightly larger than the eye of the axe head and is held in place by friction. It's not like many battle axes that are held in place by a wedge being driven into the haft. I prefer it friction held as I can remove the head quickly, this makes it easier to sharpen, to replace the shaft when the time comes and to more safely store it ( have kids so that's an important issue to me). In a pinch I can also use the head as a makeshift ulu style knife, with which I can skin animals, scrape bark, hold the beard(not by the sharp part) and push on the top point with my left thumb for controlled cuts like in feather sticking and can use the sharp edge of the eye to strike sparks of a ferro rod (yes I can make a fancy bushcrafty fire with my battle axe or any tomahawk). It's not at all optimal for these things but it can do them. So for me I would never glue or permanently attach the head. A few good swings securely resets the head when I put it back on. Again I can only speak for myself but the friction method has been used for centuries so that's good enough for me. One last thing, for safety if your axes head does not sit securely enough for you then the only safe way to make it secure is by using a wedge, axes swing with incredible power and no amount of just glue, string or tape no matter how strong will hold on the head if used for any length of time, especially if striking objects, they only give a false sense of security. All these things are just my opinion so take them for what they are and make the best decision for you.
Trustpilot
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