The Buck 110 - I was Wrong about this knife

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  • Опубліковано 16 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 107

  • @ricardocastillo5485
    @ricardocastillo5485 Рік тому +94

    If you work outdoors on a farm, ranch, whatever, as many of us do, doing real work, not just fidget-flipping and opening Amazon packages, getting tired and sweaty and dirty, then forget old vs. new, tacticool features, paramilitary looks, and just TRY this knife. When you just need to get real work done for years on end without stop, that's when this knife shines.

    • @happysingle6240
      @happysingle6240 Рік тому +18

      Really good comment, I agree , I carry a 110 everyday and use it for whatever I need. I also amused at some of these basement warriors with the paramilitary knives. The only thing these guys are going to ever cut ... is themselves.

    • @esbee1177
      @esbee1177 Рік тому +4

      Truth be told, Sir! 🫵🏻

    • @ZRockwell
      @ZRockwell 9 місяців тому +7

      @@happysingle6240 Yea imagine gatekeeping something like knives. Who cares what people do with their knives as long as they support the industry and have fun whether its fidgeting and opening amazon boxes or working on a ranch. We should be encouraging more people to carry knives even those who work in office settings instead of being a fud making fun of people.

    • @degz1s
      @degz1s 7 місяців тому +2

      I love my Leatherman

    • @andresmiguel2573
      @andresmiguel2573 7 місяців тому +3

      Good camping knife if you don’t want to take a Bowie

  • @stefanwolters3712
    @stefanwolters3712 Рік тому +22

    When my brother served in the german airforce, he went to Fort Bliss, Texas and he sent me a Buck 110 as birthday present...that was 1984 and I still wear it until today and it never disappointed me. I only had to replace the leather pouch because the leather at the tip becomes too thin.

  • @Queensizemusic
    @Queensizemusic Рік тому +17

    It’s an heirloom straight out of the box. It’s a thing of beauty.

  • @馬修-y1k
    @馬修-y1k 6 місяців тому +3

    just got one in 1 month, but heared about it over 10years , when i hold it in my hand, the beauty and quality is something you can touch and smell and hear, i cut my finger slightly by accident last night, be careful, when play with it. the first sight of the real one, looks bigger than i feel about, i bought a gerber fast 06(which also a great knife), one month later, i ecounter it again at a outdoor gear shop, i took a better look, and make a decision get one, as a birthday gift to myself--- I leave outside US. Buck 110 is one of the icon of US. only when you hold one in hand, the weight tell you some history abuout it. if i got a child in the future, i shall pass it to them a gift. Nice review, nice to hear your story too.

  • @BonaFideWildLife
    @BonaFideWildLife Місяць тому +2

    I hear so many stories of people inheriting their grandpa's Buck. I can't wait to pass mine on!

  • @tomdoherty2485
    @tomdoherty2485 Місяць тому +2

    Back in 1967 l purchased my first Buck 110 for 18 dollars and I still have it. I have had 1 reblade put in it through the years and it works real well.

  • @ScogginsOutdoors
    @ScogginsOutdoors Рік тому +12

    Good review. I'm glad to see that younger folks are appreciating this knife. I got my first 110 back in the late 60s which I have since passed down to my grandson. I now have a collection of customs, both in clip and drop point blades and S30v blades. It may not be as fast to deploy as other EDC knifes, but you can't beat it when it comes to construction. It's one hell of a knife.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  Рік тому +3

      I’m still carrying it now, and don’t plan on stopping. I’ve got a smaller quicker knife for light tasks but I feel like the 110 might as well be a fixed blade compared and love having a tank on hand. I did actually buy a custom one, went s30v, elk handle, stuck with the brass and pins and an engraving. I’ll feature it on this channel when it arrives

    • @Gerald-do9yg
      @Gerald-do9yg Рік тому

      Good to hear, Enjoy!! gg

  • @marksaint2936
    @marksaint2936 Рік тому +18

    Welcome aboard the Buck Train! Now you just need a lever action 30-30 and some Herman Survivor boots and your back to the 70's!
    Joking aside, I gave my boys 110's last Christmas and they were amazed with the old school tech.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  Рік тому +3

      45-70 preferably!

    • @ricardocastillo5485
      @ricardocastillo5485 Рік тому +4

      Waitaminute, I've carried a 110 since 1986, I drive a Dodge truck, and my rifle is literally a Winchester 94, but I've never heard of Herman boots, I gotta check that out.

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 11 місяців тому +1

      I still have my knife, but i really miss the boots. Can't find anything like them now.

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 11 місяців тому +1

      ​@@ricardocastillo5485 they were great boots and work shoes. Not expensive either. Herman's where american made almost the standard for work shoes.

  • @jeffreybarton1297
    @jeffreybarton1297 11 місяців тому +5

    Glad you liked the 110.
    I'm from the UK, so we aren't steeped in the legend of the Buck brand.
    I first heard of Buck knives in the early 80's as an 11 year old, reading a paperback. The anti hero Hells Angel in the book used his Buck knife to defend himself as well as survive in the wild.
    Since then, I always wanted a Buck knife. Finally got a Buck Squire, in the 90's.
    I now have a 119, a 110, the Squire, and a Canoe.
    All of them are still going strong, and will outlive me 😎

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 4 місяці тому +1

      Yes, bucks grow on you! There is nothing quite like them.

  • @brucechristiansen0
    @brucechristiansen0 4 місяці тому +5

    The Buck 110 is a legend. It will last you a lifetime if taken care of and not abused.

  • @davidlotspeich5547
    @davidlotspeich5547 Рік тому +6

    Buck does a phenomenal heat treat on their blades. My 112, which is the slightly smaller version of the 110, has better edge holding than a Benchmade with S30V I used to own.

  • @desertratedc9596
    @desertratedc9596 11 місяців тому +4

    I own a older 110 made in 2001 and a much newer S30V version, Remington bullet knife bucklock pro, 2 case Makos (one spearpoint and a standard clip point) and a older colonial coyote 3 inch lockback. The general design is still very functional and i think most people could easily get by with a simple carbon steel or 420HC/440c. I often carry and use my traditionals more then my modern folders which i tend to always have on me paired with a traditional. Right now i am actually carrying a full sized carbon steel case Sodbuster in my back pocket and a case 1095 carbon steel trapper in my front pocket and they are getting me through my day with no problems.

  • @missourimongoose8858
    @missourimongoose8858 3 місяці тому +5

    It truly is amazing they developed a heat treat for 440 steel thats this good

  • @richardhenry1969
    @richardhenry1969 Рік тому +4

    I carried a buck or a buck clone for more then 25 years. I’m left handed so back in the late 80s to early 90s. Every fixed blade was leather an all came right hand only.
    Back in the 80s we didn’t have bushcarft it was wilderness survival. The knife everyone used the Buck110. I’ve used it to do anything you need a knife to do. Very good at game processing.
    As a first construction worker then diesel mechanic everyone that carried a knife on the job usually had a buck. In Ranger bat in 1990 most people had a buck 110 the guys with money had coldsteel fixed blades but they were very expensive then.
    Anyway it’s still a great knife. I carry a lockback myself just nowadays I carry a coldsteel voyager an a broken skull.

  • @DisHammerhand
    @DisHammerhand 9 місяців тому +4

    I still have my Leatherman. I still like it. I have a 110 with a G10 handle someone gave me. It's nice for camping but I think I want one of the old school looking ones. (Edit: I just went and ordered one from Buck) I had a clone in the 80s and I have another in a drawer. When I think pocket knife the brass and ebony 110 comes to mind.

  • @Gerald-do9yg
    @Gerald-do9yg Рік тому +4

    Ryan, really appreciate this video!! Mr. Castillo nailed it, the Ol' 110 is more than just a pretty face!! Not to mention one of the most copied designs in the world! It's no light-weight in more ways than one!! Thanks to all those who weighed in with positive comments! Blsgs, Enjoy your Labor Day, gg

  • @桜遊Ouyu
    @桜遊Ouyu 10 місяців тому +3

    Good evening 🌠 Nice to meet you, I'm Japanese. I love the Buck 110 too! I've been using the stag handle for 27 years. I finally bought a new 110 recently because the blade had worn out. It came with a nylon case instead of a leather case. It's a really great knife ✨!!

  • @ronmartin3755
    @ronmartin3755 Рік тому +4

    You kids seem to think anything that isn't weird looking with all kinds of holes and black metal and knobs and buttons ona knife don't make it a good knife! The Buck 110 was first sold in 1964. I have one of the first Buck 110s I bought in 1964. It has always been a great knife and is a lot better than the Garbage I see for sale today!

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  Рік тому +1

      The Buck 110 is objectively a great knife. I personally love it. But make no mistake; there are knives today made better in every single way. Advancement in technology is why the Buck 110 came about, and I attribute a lot of what’s happened today in the knife world to the influence of the 110. It’ll always be a classic, but the “Best” knife is based on individual situation and perspective.

  • @horse433
    @horse433 5 днів тому +1

    I use mine not abuse it, some times I sharpen it or clean it. It still looks good

  • @ACA01970
    @ACA01970 2 місяці тому +1

    This is a knife that you can trust and that will not let you down in any situation

  • @skim193
    @skim193 7 місяців тому +5

    if u dont have atleast 2 buck 110s are u really a collector?

  • @mike663yt
    @mike663yt 4 місяці тому +2

    Got my first one in 1978. Never used the sheath much. Always carried it in my hip pocket beside my wallet. Common way of carry back then. It cost about $22.00 back then as I remember. Still have it. Lots of wear and abuse through the years, but it still works perfectly. Just wish I knew what happened to the sheath. Haven’t seen it in over thirty years.

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 4 місяці тому

      Hi Mike,
      You paid to much for a 110. I paid $19 for mine.
      Take care fellow traveler!

  • @TheOneAndOnlySame
    @TheOneAndOnlySame 2 місяці тому +5

    Oh yeah, I've just pressed the trigger for a 110.
    It's been years since I kind of hovered around it, always finding better reasons to buy something else, something modern, something with a fancy lock or a fancy blade steel . I even contemplated the Pro version in S30V (I like s30v) and micarta but..
    I finally was drawn to the Classical, old school look . I wanted to have the legend. And thus, boom. Buck 110, en route to me !
    (I will still buy the Pro someday lol)

    • @Sanguivore
      @Sanguivore 2 місяці тому

      I find myself in the same situation almost exactly. Prolly gonna buy a 110 tomorrow after putting it off for years and always going for other knives. I was also considering getting the S30V custom, but I think the classic is really just where it's at.

    • @TheOneAndOnlySame
      @TheOneAndOnlySame 2 місяці тому

      @@Sanguivore So? Bought it? =)

    • @Sanguivore
      @Sanguivore 2 місяці тому

      @@TheOneAndOnlySame Yep! :D Just purchased it, LOL. It's on my hip as we speak! Bought our last one we had in stock.

    • @TheOneAndOnlySame
      @TheOneAndOnlySame 2 місяці тому

      @@Sanguivore Nice. Ho do you like it?

  • @BryansKnivesKy
    @BryansKnivesKy 9 місяців тому +1

    You just can't beat a Buck 110 for a solid, do it all kind of knife. Love mine. This was THE knife to own when I was growing up and it's just as good today as it was then.

  • @rationalhuman2149
    @rationalhuman2149 8 місяців тому +1

    The reason the one pin is steel is because it’s the pivot pin for the lock bar and goes all the way through,, not just holding the scales on.

  • @davidmarshall7752
    @davidmarshall7752 9 місяців тому +2

    Had a Buck phase about a year ago, the oldies with "three pins" (and other silliness). I like 'em a lot. The only serious lock-back competitor out there is the *Tonic* , an 'Inset-ball backlock' design from a guy named Colin Maisonpierre.

  • @georgieluis5238
    @georgieluis5238 Місяць тому +1

    Buck is the godfather of lock back knives.

  • @jimdavidson7771
    @jimdavidson7771 8 місяців тому +2

    I think a 110 should be a part of every collector's stash. It's a knife with historical significance, being the OG and all. I carried one every day for a decade, and for the most part loved it. That being said, I have to admit that I never choose it for daily carry anymore. There are too many modern knives which weigh less, have better blade steel, torx screws, one handed opening, and a plethora of lock mechanisms that beat the 110. Oh, and many of them are more affordable. And as far as the "made in USA" thing, it's a non issue for me. After all, neither metallurgy or steel cutlery were invented here.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  8 місяців тому +1

      I agree! I think it’s a great knife, and I carry a custom 110 with s30v on my hip as a hard use knife, but seldom use it day to day. Currently delving into Spyderco, which I never thought I would, but I got a PM3 in a trade and I have to say, it’s something else.
      The 110 is great though and I love having a few in my collection. They are old timey tanks and definitely still have their place

  • @stephenbeaver2035
    @stephenbeaver2035 12 днів тому

    Nothing to decide. Everyone needs a buck 110.

  • @RyanHamley-cl6en
    @RyanHamley-cl6en 7 місяців тому +2

    420 steel is good. Snobs say otherwise but i bet they haven't been hunting fishing working ect for 20+ years with no complaints with their super steels.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  7 місяців тому +1

      420 is definitely serviceable. It’s easier to sharpen and, working in a kitchen myself, I understand the value of steel that is less hard and easily sharpened. So many people want a knife that never dulls, but the harder it is, the harder it falls. The result is many super steels tend to chip instead of deflect, leaving possible issues that can’t be sharpened out in heavy use cases. A softer steel (my preference is 154cm as a mid ground. Not soft, just not through the roof either) is easier to work on, and imo, better for any kind of hard use.
      If you’re just opening boxes and cutting tape/paper, those everlasting gobstopper steels are fine

  • @BakeryWizard13
    @BakeryWizard13 Рік тому +6

    I will always prefer the 112. It's a better size. Love Bucks heat treat on their steel though.

    • @davidmarshall7752
      @davidmarshall7752 9 місяців тому +2

      The Ranger? Yeah it's a great carry and more practical.

  • @TRG916
    @TRG916 Місяць тому +2

    I’m a weirdo. I LOVE the smell of the leather sheath

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  Місяць тому +1

      @@TRG916 me too! Lol

    • @TRG916
      @TRG916 Місяць тому +1

      @@TheOpinionariumI’ve cut raw leather with my 110. I live in Spokane Valley WA 20 minutes from the Buck plant in Post Falls ID. Their store is amazing.

    • @ANARCHY-nr2lq
      @ANARCHY-nr2lq Місяць тому

      Heck yeah!

  • @MrMZaccone
    @MrMZaccone 10 місяців тому +1

    The one problem with this design is that it can be "overclosed" so that the edge near the tip makes contact with the frame and ends up dull. There are plenty of designs out there that don't even allow this to happen. It's just a worry I don't need.

  • @horse433
    @horse433 5 днів тому

    Maybe not a everyday carry knife for most people but still worth getting one. It satisfies some male desire

  • @rxvanz
    @rxvanz Місяць тому

    I had one when I was 10 years old. It was the early 80's. Times were different back then. I would flip it open a lot and throw it around till the lock broke where it locks the blade. My uncles had one, my cousins and a few of my friends. It was cool till they started selling throwing stars and Butterfly knives. A couple of years later First Blood Rambo was out and the survival knife was the craze back then.

  • @kirbycreekmo
    @kirbycreekmo Рік тому +4

    Saw my first 110 in 1974. Wanted one from that moment. I like the Buck 110 even more these days. I doubt many of the "modern" knives will have that sort of longevity.

  • @martinhafner2201
    @martinhafner2201 Місяць тому

    It's a great knife, just not a fidget toy. Buck specifically designed it for skinning and camping.
    Because I'm not a big fan of stainless steel, I found a very similar (really a copy) competitor's knife, the Schrade Old Timer OT-7.
    They're unfortunately Asian now, but I found an old Schrade USA OT-7 in 1095 carbon steel. Really nice.
    I added a screw-on thumb stud for one handed opening for less than 5 bucks.
    420HC is fairly tough for a stainless steel, but not nearly as good as 1095. I can keep my knives dry and greased. I'd rather have the performance.
    The particular knife I got was off of eBay in a 3 knife set and was just a ride-along with the Camillus navy rigging knife I was looking for. It's really old, probably from the 70's or 80's, but the original owner didn't oversharpen it, so it has about 90's of the blade life left and just some light rust I cleaned up with naval jelly, steel wool, polish, break-free and grease. Real easy to sharpen with hardly any burr complications.

  • @deandee8082
    @deandee8082 Місяць тому

    my favorite folding knife in said price range, of course you could get a bone handle PA knife works engraved bone or antler with Japanese surgical steel for double the cost but for the basic folding knife in a perfect all around size? its the Buck all day long for me, my next will be the finger carved in ebony . . and the wood really natters here cuz these are easily 250 year knives, they can last a LONG time, some 50yr old ones look new today, even the used ones, mine looks the way i bought it and its cleaned fish, game, in all climates, carved this and that and is still in real good shape.. very well made knives and they haven't cheeped out on the process today, they are still very well made, they have changed the layout some 2 pin to 3 pin so forth but still very tight tolerances, very good AAA materials and craftsmanship is spot on... a guy can never go wrong fora folding type utility knife, hale I'll cut a steak up with it that's how much I trust the metal as being very clean.. great knives

  • @Sbmf66
    @Sbmf66 27 днів тому

    Great review! The 110 should be in every knife guy’s collection. Check the Buck autos..

  • @nolomus
    @nolomus 3 місяці тому

    I just ordered a 110 today, because it was on sale for $80 (instead of $130) in a Swiss onlineshop 👍

  • @johnshifflett1722
    @johnshifflett1722 7 місяців тому +1

    The Buck 110 is The Working Man’s knife. And that is for a reason. All these new knives are more for show like a sports cars, they’re showy and open fast.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  7 місяців тому

      I agree to a certain extent, there are certainly exceptions, and many of them.
      Anything with a standard button lock is a tape cutter.
      But, knives like the Spyderco PM2, The Microtech LUDT, etc. there’s a point where you can accept that most folding knives in general are not meant for heavy abuse, some (like the 110 and those I’ve listed) can. But a pocket knife isn’t Meant for that, not even the 110.
      A pocket knife is for cutting tape, paper, cardboard, string, a lot of people use them for food prep etc etc.
      But a folding knife seldom can truly replace a full fixed blade when it comes to proper hard use. The truth is most of us don’t Need a knife that sturdy, that’s why we turn to pocket knives.
      And I understand the perspective too, because I wouldn’t ever use a pocket knife for food prep- mine’s a tool. If I want to prep food, I’ll get a Chef knife, etc. I’m a cook afterall and that’s what I go for by nature.
      And yes there’s a growing, massive culture of people who get these knives and will never really need a hard use knife, office workers, so on so forth.
      In the kitchen my knife gets through large zip ties, I cut openings in boxes for ease of access and I open and break down thousands upon thousands of boxes. I find more uses as I go, but I know there are some who don’t get anywhere near as much use as I, and some who get ten times as much. Were all different and all have different needs/uses when it comes to knives and tools.
      So objectively, the 110 is a great knife, to someone who doesn’t need a knife fast and who needs it to handle a large amount of abuse.
      But in my situation, I reach for my faster pocket knives every time, because my work environment calls on me to be as fast as I can be at times

  • @jeffwright9431
    @jeffwright9431 9 місяців тому +1

    I've carried my Buck 110 since 1977. If I were to lose it I would order another one just like it. I have other good quality knives but the Buck always ends up on my belt.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  9 місяців тому

      I keep my custom 110 on my belt as a heavier duty knife and use flipper as my primary, because it’s faster and I have to break down boxes all day. I’ll admit I haven’t had to break it out often but it’s nice having it just in case, it’s not the only redundancy in my edc lol

  • @chrisallen7512
    @chrisallen7512 4 місяці тому +1

    I was messing around with mine one night and had my pointer finger in the path of the blade when it was snapping back into the handle and man it fricken sliced me good….it was brand new, when I got it about a year ago from Meijer’s here in Michigan….bought it for about $50…they’re selling them now at the same meijers for like $68 now….of course I moved and seemed to have misplaced it somewhere….i did beat the shit out of it one night I was camping with the family. I somehow managed to make it where the knife doesn’t snap into the handle anymore, but does still click open fine…I was beating the back of it with a log trying to split some small logs and went too hard I guess….was using it and messing around shaving some kindling for the fire too….thing is still super sharp after going at it pretty hard lol

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  4 місяці тому +1

      They can definitely take a beating, sounds like you might’ve bent or pushed the back spring out of alignment

  • @WoodsmanHobo777
    @WoodsmanHobo777 11 місяців тому +2

    I have reached out to Buck three times for warranty over the last 2 months with no response.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  11 місяців тому

      Their warranty is a bit different, www.buckknives.com/about/behind-the-blade/bucks-forever-warranty/

  • @perfectlysureunknown
    @perfectlysureunknown Місяць тому

    Swiss Army is the OG of multitools, and the Swiss Tools smoke the competition.

  • @charlespratt8663
    @charlespratt8663 5 місяців тому +2

    The Buck 110 is the fixed blade that folds.

    • @billh.1940
      @billh.1940 4 місяці тому

      The fixed blade is the folder that doesn't fold.😅
      I use both, love them.

  • @12345678927164
    @12345678927164 9 місяців тому +6

    This is a masculine folder in world of feminine hypebeast knives.

  • @Wcquick
    @Wcquick 2 місяці тому

    Good video review of the Buck 110

  • @roguerader
    @roguerader 5 місяців тому +1

    what's the point of reviewing an out of the box product? I never understood why people do that?

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  5 місяців тому

      Packaging matters almost nothing to someone who’s going to use an item.
      I unbox a lot of stuff but I’m here to talk about an edc item, not about the plastic/paper it came wrapped in. You can keep a knife for life but why waist breath on some packaging that’ll be in the garbage soon enough?

  • @Matt-to1bi
    @Matt-to1bi Місяць тому

    Mora is nice too

  • @lriper4702
    @lriper4702 Місяць тому +1

    The 110 costs €125 in Europe

  • @rwirtz77
    @rwirtz77 10 місяців тому +1

    belt sheath is great, get some dickies work pants and you'll love it, no more scratching up your knife and it's always in the exact same spot and if your smooth you'll have it out quicker then a pocket clip knife, also, no more pocket lint on your knife and hollow grind beats flat grind all day long.

  • @billh.1940
    @billh.1940 3 місяці тому

    So ryan, a million buck users might be right. 😅 don't mind us, we just don't want to say, we told you so. 😅😅
    My first one cost $19. Lost it, next one was $29. 😢

  • @dpotter7503
    @dpotter7503 8 місяців тому +1

    How's the love 6 months in?

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  8 місяців тому

      I still carry one on my hip as a back up tank knife. I haven’t had to use it much but it’s solid and dependable.
      I haven’t had any rust issues and despite fidgeting with it semi-often the action is still as smooth as it was out of the box.
      Still solid recommend for anyone looking for a really solid knife, who doesn’t mind a larger knife and a slower open/close system

  • @larryreece1427
    @larryreece1427 5 місяців тому +2

    I have been carring the same 110 since 1979 ,properly serviced it will last you a lifetime ,its like a 57 chevy it only gets better with age !!!

    • @johnj6689
      @johnj6689 3 місяці тому

      There's also a very large contrast in edge retention between the 440C on your 1979 era 110 and the soft 420HC they've been using since the 1990's.

    • @larryreece1427
      @larryreece1427 3 місяці тому

      @@johnj6689 I have a 2022 year 110 in my pick up I use on my small farm it's easy to sharpen and holds a decent edge ,it doesn't hold the edge my 79 does but it's still a rugged tough knife for every day heavy use I also am a knife collector ,and have tried a different bunch of knives ,the buck is the toughest I have used .

    • @johnj6689
      @johnj6689 3 місяці тому

      @@larryreece1427 Yeah that's because 420j2 and 420HC are pretty hard to break and rust. Massive price difference though.

  • @jamescooper2618
    @jamescooper2618 4 місяці тому +1

    Gerber uses 420HC for the Strongarm knife which has been in many videos showing how tough it is. Buck's 420HC makes a great blade. Takes a wicked sharp edge and cuts like a demon. That's what this knife is for so, just sayin.

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 7 місяців тому

    Holy crap without noticing it My comment is sort of related To the guy below me comment.. 😂😂😂😂😂 . I swear I didn't copy I read it after. Kick-ass.

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 7 місяців тому +1

    Are you 1 of those tactica-cool guys that have to have at least 15 different folding knives even though they're just folding knives ? Gotta have the latest and greatest cool steels?? Gotta have minimally at least 10 different companies producing these cool steels ?? Maybe the Buck 110 didn't want you either. 😂But I'm glad you've seen the light. Now go and buy 10 of them. 1 for every 5 years of production... at least.

    • @TheOpinionarium
      @TheOpinionarium  7 місяців тому

      It’s obvious you thought you’d manage to be insulting lol. No im not into “Tactical” stuff. I carry a pocket knife because I use it everyday, I work in a kitchen. In a tactical situation, I have a Ruger on my side.
      No I’m here on UA-cam reviewing stuff because it’s a hobby, and because I might as well be kind and share my knowledge and experience on what I have gotten to try out.
      I’ve found that modern supersteels come with too many draw backs. They give up toughness for long edge retention, which is great if you’re an office worker that cuts tape all day. I’m not.
      So to come full circle -
      Are you one of those guys that gets online and tries to make other people feel bad because you either don’t have anything better to do or you yourself don’t feel so great and you just wanna bring other people down to your level?

    • @tikkidaddy
      @tikkidaddy 3 місяці тому

      Well if he WAS interested in current trends, he could acquire the 110 in CPM Magnacut and nickel silver handles and carbon fiber scales. Won't get you to the flippy fidget nervous knife toy stage, but its still a hell of a knife. So I don't see everybody's constant bitching about this topic in EVERY comment section on YT. 😂 Its a knife. Use it, sharpen it, hone it, enjoy it...😂😂

  • @petemitchell6788
    @petemitchell6788 2 місяці тому

    If you turn your head away from the mic, speak louder or stop speaking. It’s what a professional would do if making video reviews.

  • @ronaldbrown5796
    @ronaldbrown5796 Місяць тому

    boring