No other company makes a knife that good, with that warranty! My 5 lives on my hip, 24/7. Have a jungle in my back pack for brush, and the 4 on my neck or in my pocket for apples and fine cutting.
I'm 59 years old. I've been using knives since I was 5. I've owned many, many knives. I've also had knives that cost hundreds of dollars. All I can say is, the BEST geometry of any knife I've ever used, was the Buck 110.
See. This is the type of comment I don’t get. Best geometry for what? Chopping wood? Slicing bread? Cleaning your fingernails? We as a population need to stop using this word so loosely. Geometry is a word that’s an umbrella. What’s underneath it?
The term "blade geometry" is basically just a fancy way of saying some knives are slicey boys and some knives are stabby boys. Then we have some knives, like the Japanese-style tanto do both equally well.
@@peterbiltknifeguy Blade geometry is the reason why axes are better for chopping down a tree than a razor blade used to shave one's face. My statement still stands. It is a fancy way of saying the thickness and shape of a blade determine how it will cut, slice, stab, etc.
@@TheAverageCriminal no. NO. because people just say geometry without specifying what it is or isn’t good for. A brick has geometry. I’m trying to get people to stop using blanket statements
@@peterbiltknifeguy We all know what blade geometry is, but I'm not sure you do. It's the mathematics behind the thickness, curvature, and shape of the blade. It's the reason why an American-style Tanto pierces better than a drop point and why a thin flat ground Spyderco slices better than a saber ground survival knife.
Also add sharpening, metallurgy, usage and knife making to that list..We dont know crap because we dont use knives like our forefathers used to..We wait around for you to make videos so we can understand..
Yes sir. Full flat grind vs. Saber grind and thickness vs. width. Are you really getting all of these blades this sharp on the Worksharp pocket sharpener?
@@peterbiltknifeguy geometry always "hot" conversation, lol, i already made chisel, conveks, concave geometry, about quench there is two major type, tip first or bavel first, for bavel first ,if the knife long enough it will be curve the geometry, wont be straight anymore ,like katana, 30 cm golok too
Symmetry, Geometry. Potatoes, French fries .
Potato potatoe
And this is why I have at least thirty knives at any given time.
Ive always carried knives since i was a wee lad but i only just started really getting into it. Your channel is oh so helpful. thank you!
Intent of use determines the tool for the job
You should make a full video on this explaining it
Oh trust me. I will be
@@peterbiltknifeguy looking forward to it
❤"GEOMETRY" BLAW BLAW BLAW ❤ 🔥🗡🔥♥ 🕊
Gee, i'm a tree.
lol
Depends on what you use it for. I don't use my ESEE5 for detail work 😊
No other company makes a knife that good, with that warranty! My 5 lives on my hip, 24/7. Have a jungle in my back pack for brush, and the 4 on my neck or in my pocket for apples and fine cutting.
@@We.are.all.human. If you haven't tried it yet, you need to check out the CR2.5. it's small but sturdy, and much lighter for a neck knife.
I'm just happy if it can cut paper really really well
I mean I’d argue that any knife with that thicker side profile would be good for wood processing and batoning at any thickness
Les 2 lames sont très bien le tranchant, poli, miroir, fait peur😅
Alllllll I wanna kno is,
Do the Schnauzberries taste like schnazberries?!?
The work tuff gear tayal is a great skinning knife if your a hunter.
I'm 59 years old. I've been using knives since I was 5. I've owned many, many knives. I've also had knives that cost hundreds of dollars. All I can say is, the BEST geometry of any knife I've ever used, was the Buck 110.
See. This is the type of comment I don’t get. Best geometry for what? Chopping wood? Slicing bread? Cleaning your fingernails? We as a population need to stop using this word so loosely. Geometry is a word that’s an umbrella. What’s underneath it?
@@peterbiltknifeguy Best geometry for multiple uses.
What if you use network self-defense?Will it make a difference?Will it make a difference
Great point
Can you make a video on How you skarpen your knife im really bad at it looks like you a lv 100 wizard on sharpning stone
There are thousands of videos on that subject.. its the internet.. in 2024.. come on
@@user-kk7jx3yc5q but not from this guy
@@user-kk7jx3yc5qbro go be misserable somewhere else
Are we able send knives to you to sharpen for us? Just wondering 😅 Also don’t give up on your dreams this man is a great example😊
Cocok dipakai ke kebun
Yea I'm sure a lot don't even know geometry lol.
🙌🏼😁🙌🏼😁🙌🏼
100% AGREE
You’re a smart dude. I’m about to get a new bushcraft knife. Should I go full flat or saber? I’m going Bradford guardian 6 if you need more info
I’m a fan of full flat grid. But ultimately it depends on what you’ll be doing with it
@@peterbiltknifeguy a little of everything. I’d say the hardest use it’d get is probably batonning
@@joshdoe7288 a saber should spilt wood better. But that’s a small trade off in my opinion
Facts
MAKE A KNIFE THAT CAN CUT OBSIDIAN
😊😊😊😊😊
What about a geometry dash
😮😮😮😮😮
Can u name them
The term "blade geometry" is basically just a fancy way of saying some knives are slicey boys and some knives are stabby boys. Then we have some knives, like the Japanese-style tanto do both equally well.
Lol. No. Because an axe and a kitchen knife both have geometry.
@@peterbiltknifeguy Blade geometry is the reason why axes are better for chopping down a tree than a razor blade used to shave one's face. My statement still stands. It is a fancy way of saying the thickness and shape of a blade determine how it will cut, slice, stab, etc.
@@TheAverageCriminal no. NO. because people just say geometry without specifying what it is or isn’t good for. A brick has geometry. I’m trying to get people to stop using blanket statements
@@peterbiltknifeguy We all know what blade geometry is, but I'm not sure you do. It's the mathematics behind the thickness, curvature, and shape of the blade. It's the reason why an American-style Tanto pierces better than a drop point and why a thin flat ground Spyderco slices better than a saber ground survival knife.
@@TheAverageCriminal okay 👍 🤦🏻♂️
Also add sharpening, metallurgy, usage and knife making to that list..We dont know crap because we dont use knives like our forefathers used to..We wait around for you to make videos so we can understand..
Sharpening would fall In edge geometry.
@@peterbiltknifeguy see goes to show we don't know sheett..
@@paulstoyek381 lol.
Yes sir. Full flat grind vs. Saber grind and thickness vs. width. Are you really getting all of these blades this sharp on the Worksharp pocket sharpener?
No. I’m using my belt sander setup
You literally said that „This knife has the worst geometry you could put on a knife“ in your last video bruh
No sir.
@@peterbiltknifeguy yes Sir, look at it
@@user-xm2yx7vb7h no. The knife in the other short was a tops moccasin Ranger that had bad geometry
And yet you have wide as bevels on all of them
And your point is
Cut cardboard
And material, and heat treatment :)
That has nothing to do with the geometry lol. It just allows for different geometry.
@@peterbiltknifeguy geometry always "hot" conversation, lol, i already made chisel, conveks, concave geometry, about quench there is two major type, tip first or bavel first, for bavel first ,if the knife long enough it will be curve the geometry, wont be straight anymore ,like katana, 30 cm golok too
I try to use my knives to cut stuff.....You are welcome from Captain Obvious....🤣🤣🤣🤣.....Good suff....
But can you cut the cheese??? What about a rug? 🤣
@@peterbiltknifeguy 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Have you ever cut yourself off on your knives please tell me now