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Time to replace the pocket-knife.
Posted: 2005-01-06 03:13am
by Questor
Well, it appears to be time for me to replace my pocket-knife.
What brands/models do you guys recommend?
Posted: 2005-01-06 03:16am
by Alyeska
CRKT (Columbia River Knife and Tool) makes great knives. I have a M16 series 12Z Zytel blade.
http://www.knifesite.com/fullsize/CRM16-12Z.jpg
The finger guard keeping your index finger from touching the blade is actualy a carson flipper and allows you to quickly flip the blade out. It locks nicely and you can also slide a safety that holds the lock shut. Good utility knife for cutting through paper, tape, boxes, rope, etc... Good self defense knife.
Posted: 2005-01-06 04:02am
by Imperial Overlord
Leatherman Multitool.
Posted: 2005-01-06 04:40am
by weemadando
Leatherman or a Gerbil - I mean Gerber.
Posted: 2005-01-06 09:56am
by aerius
It all depends on budget and use. For general utility on a modest budget I usually recommend the
Benchmade mini-Griptilian or the fullsize Griptilian version. The
Camillus EDC is also a good option, but due to the blade shape it takes a lot more practice to sharpen. If you want a prettier knife at the expense of handle security, the
Kershaw Sapphire is a good bet. Good for cutting things, but not for stabbing. All the above can be had for about $50 each.
And of course, everyone must own a folding Bowie knife such as the
Camillus MAXX.
Posted: 2005-01-06 11:51am
by Petrosjko
Well, if you're like me and lose 'em or break 'em regularly, I'd recommend Gerber. They make some decent knives at reasonably cheap prices.
Otherwise, I'd go with Alyeska or Aerius' recommendations.
Posted: 2005-01-06 01:37pm
by Robert Walper
There here be my baby:
Unfortunately, the blade is loose.
Posted: 2005-01-06 01:59pm
by Elheru Aran
I've always liked Victorinox's Swiss Army knives. My dad's never had any problems with his, and I had mine for a good twelve years or so... wish i hadn't lost it, though...
Posted: 2005-01-06 05:08pm
by Wicked Pilot
I second the Victorinox Swiss Army knife. I always carry mine on me, and boy can it come in handy. Once I even repaired my car on the side of the road with just the knife. Growing up MacGyver sure had it's influences.
Posted: 2005-01-06 07:11pm
by phongn
I have a little Leatherman Micra multitool on my keychain but that isn't really a true pocketknife. Be warned, multitool arguments are near religious in fervor (Leatherman, Gerber, SOG and Victorinox all having their partisans).
Aerius usually has good recommendations on knives, tho.
Posted: 2005-01-06 08:17pm
by Fleet Admiral JD
I usually just get the little cheapos at Ocean State Job lot.
They see me through
Posted: 2005-01-06 08:19pm
by Tasoth
Kurki. Before anyone gets on me about the size of that bad boy, I do remember seeing very small ones for sale somewhere.
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:05pm
by YT300000
Tasoth wrote:Kurki. Before anyone gets on me about the size of that bad boy, I do remember seeing very small ones for sale somewhere.
I had a smatchet with me at one point or another. So don't tell me about unreasonable size.
I'd recommend a simple lockback, or side lock. Now, I LOVE Ka-Bars. I admit it. May I recommend:
https://www.ka-bar.com/product_detail.j ... y/Tactical
or perhaps
https://www.ka-bar.com/product_detail.j ... umber=4064
Now, personally, I'm extremely partial to this one:
https://www.ka-bar.com/product_detail.j ... umber=2746
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:20pm
by YT300000
Oh, and in the less realistic category, may I recommend something similar to my very own
favorite blade.
Yeah, I know its dark. Its just a basic twirl.
EDIT: Argh. Let me see if I can't get a direct on-site link.
EDIT2: Here we go.
http://yt300000.250free.com/bali.html
Damn, I love 2.25 GB of monthly bandwidth for free...
Yeah, excuse the total lack of anything on that page. I just made it in 2 seconds so you could see this vid.
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:23pm
by Jaepheth
I was thinking of getting one of these:
http://www.coldsteel.com/tilites.html
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:26pm
by YT300000
Too expensive. For that price, I could get a Jaguar Balisong...
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:40pm
by aerius
No, just say no to that one. 420J2 is crap-ass steel with a claimed hardness of only 52-54 on the Rockwell C scale (actually you're lucky if you can get 52), it'll hold an edge about as well as a plastic butterknife.
Acceptable as a beater knife. The handles on those flex a fair bit and the knife gets a sloppy feeling fast. The lock & blade pivots on those develop play pretty fast, not good.
Same problem as the first knife, 420J2 is not an acceptable blade steel, too soft, and no wear resistance.
As a mininum, you need a steel such as AUS6 or 420HC which has a hardness of 55-57 on the Rockwell C scale. 2-3 points doesn't sound like much, but the scale isn't exactly linear, plus these steels have more alloyed elements which makes them a lot more wear resistant. 52 is something you can easily file, cut with a hacksaw, or drill through with a standard high-speed steel drill bit. 55 and hacksaws just slide across it, while files start losing their grip. 58 and files slide right off it while drill bits have a really hard time getting through. 62 and standard drill bits won't even scratch it, and only carbide or diamond tipped drills can go through it.
Posted: 2005-01-06 10:54pm
by aerius
Overpriced piece of shit knife, it's worth $80 at best. Get a
Benchmade 710HS in ultra-hard M2 tool steel. You can cut through pop cans all day with it and the blade will still be decently sharp. I cut 2 pop cans into 1/2" wide strips before the edge lost shaving sharpness. Or if you want a legal switchblade,
Camillus Dominator which I own & recommend, or its larger brother the
Aftermath
YT300000 wrote:Too expensive. For that price, I could get a Jaguar Balisong...
If you want to see expensive, try to find a
Benchmade 49-01 Balisong, of which only 100 were ever made. Goes for well over $1000 last time I checked.
Posted: 2005-01-06 11:14pm
by YT300000
I only ever owned one of those knives, although I've used all of them.
aerius wrote:Acceptable as a beater knife. The handles on those flex a fair bit and the knife gets a sloppy feeling fast. The lock & blade pivots on those develop play pretty fast, not good.
Mine didn't do that, stayed as good as new for the whole time I had it, and I had it for about 2 years, fairly regular use. No idea where it went...
As for the softness, I don't exactly use these for heavy duty stuff, and the hugely diminished price is a good trade-off for something that won't be hacking open trees, or slicing off arms.
I don't like any of the fancy butterflys really, they're just ugly and overly ornamental to me. A plain black or brushed metal nice quarter pound of invincible steel with grooves and holes is good enough for me.
Posted: 2005-01-06 11:51pm
by aerius
YT300000 wrote:Mine didn't do that, stayed as good as new for the whole time I had it, and I had it for about 2 years, fairly regular use. No idea where it went...
Hmm, you might've gotten a ringer. Either that or I abused mine a bit too much. The blade on mine developed up & down as well as side to side play in less than half a year. Might've been from prying & cutting those hard nylon packing bands which isn't exactly good for it, but I've done that and worse with most of my knives with no damage.
As for the softness, I don't exactly use these for heavy duty stuff, and the hugely diminished price is a good trade-off for something that won't be hacking open trees, or slicing off arms.
If the knife's mostly used for opening envelops, that's fine, but anything more than that and you'll need a better steel. I have a few knives from before I knew better made out of soft 420J2 steel and they literally have no edge holding and will not sharpen easily to a crisp edge. Take a shaving sharp 420J2 blade and cut through about 5-10' of corrugated cardboard and it will no longer shave. A decent steel such as 420HC will cut about 30-50' before dulling that much, as well as taking a better edge to start with. Knives made from D2 or M2 tool steel will hold an edge until you've turned a warehouse full of boxes into confetti, that's because the original application of those steels is to stamp out and cut steel & metal, they are truly a manly steel.
I don't like any of the fancy butterflys really, they're just ugly and overly ornamental to me. A plain black or brushed metal nice quarter pound of invincible steel with grooves and holes is good enough for me.
The
Benchmade 42 is the standard against which all Balisongs are compared.
Posted: 2005-01-07 02:09am
by Robert Walper
Hell, why hold back? Get one of
these.
Posted: 2005-01-07 02:13am
by darthdavid
Get the subtle knife...
Posted: 2005-01-07 04:13am
by Faram
Frosts works for me, durable dirt cheap and very good knifes.
Never had anyone of those fail for me, works great and if you abuse it to shit just buy a new one for $5 or so.
Posted: 2005-01-07 01:30pm
by Zoink
I carry the Gerber Applegate/Fairbairn Combat Knife (compact).
I went to the shop looking for something else originally, but after handling that thing it felt so nice I had to buy it. Besides the nice balance, it's cool because you can flick it open, but is also legal in Canada (which bans switch blades, butterfly, or other 'flicking' knives). You need to push the blade out a tiny bit with a thumb tab before it'll flicks, which bypasses the Canadian law. But its such a small amount it really opens in a single motion.
Posted: 2005-01-07 07:17pm
by YT300000
Robert Walper wrote:Hell, why hold back? Get one of
these.
That reminds me, I need to regrip my machete.