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Knives @lemmy.world
DominusOfMegadeus @sh.itjust.works

I am looking at these for everyday carry. What are your takes?

10 comments
  • I’d also recommend scrapping all those options and look at Civivi, Kershaw, Spyderco’s budget line, or Kizer. Civivi and Kizer are Chinese-made knives that punch above their weight class, especially compared to the brands you mention. I’d also recommend using BladeHQ’s awesome search features to really figure out what you want. Then try to find it cheaper elsewhere.

  • In my opinion you should save up and buy a benchmade. Even the cheapest benchmade will last longer than these.

    My go to recommendation is the Griptilian but the bugout is nice too.

    • I am trying to spend the rest of a gift card on something useful, and I am not willing to sacrifice my new crocs in favor of a Benchmade! 😁

  • I carry a knife to work every day; I use it for light duty like cutting up cardboard boxes or sharpening pencils, and sometimes just to have an enhanced "fingernail" to scrape bits of things. With that in mind...

    I use a CIVIVI Chevalier virtually every day, and if I only had one knife, ever, it would be that one. It flicks open and shut silky smooth one-handed. The blade is a perfectly medium size. The pocket clip is reversible if needed. Mine has micarta scales and feels very grippy, but not sticky. I love this knife.

    The only close competition for me in my CRKT Squid. It's tiny, but mighty. I've put a pinky lanyard on mine, and with that on my finger I can easily open and close it one-handed, a task I've struggled with with some liner locks. The blade is no longer than my thumb, which in truth is as much as I need for 90% of jobs. Did I mention it's tiny? I can tuck it into the little coin pocket on my pants and forget it's there until it's needed. I've also got a Squid Compact which is even smaller but still plenty ergonomic, and I quite like, but the Compact has an assisted open, which can be nice but sometimes I don't want the spring loaded action. I haven't run into tasks the Squid couldn't handle, though I'm not out here carving up deer carcasses; the only thing is that the blade geometry is just a tiny bit chunkier than the Chevalier, so it's not quite as good at those "fingernail" jobs that I mentioned earlier. Not a complaint, and honestly if you want a knife that will do lots of work and still present itself as more "diplomatic" than "scary knifey knife," then the Squid is one hundred percent recommended. Without exaggeration, because I keep seeing them at surplus shops, I've got four of them, because they're so nice and I'm afraid of how I'll feel if I lose or break one and can't easily get a replacement.

    And since you mentioned Buck, I've got their 256, which is a lot like the CEO. It's got a lovely smooth action, and I did a bit of light whittling with it the other night and it did just fine.

10 comments