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I certainly respect a seller that does QC filtering before shipping to a customer. Man! I think I will buy from you. Most sellers scoff at me if I ask them to check for blade centering and blade play/wobble.
I’m with you on the gapping, it doesn’t bother me as much, but the blade wobble is my pet peeve. I’ve watched your videos, and I’ve seen the hammer marks on your Winchester Sunfish, which is how a few of mine are. I actually started getting into moose patterns from watching your stuff, and have acquired a few cool Winchester moose knives from the Bill Howard years at Queen. One of my favs, is a Robeson moose from 94, perfect example of how amazing Queen could be. As good as any of their Shatts, in my opinion. Red bone, is gorgeous. Gotta love eBay right. Anyways, stay cool brother
Thanks for bringing this problem up as I’ve got a two bladed Case Barlow which is not that bad but there is a gap, but to be honest it’s only about a inch long I looked closer and noticed it’s the back spring bar that was badly machined which is bloody annoying as the rest of the knife is spot on. So come on Case get your act together I know you can do it. I’m going to take a pic of it and send it to case and see what they say, as I live in the UK I won’t be sending it back. Thanks for posting!!!
Last Case I bought was for my dad, a 3 blade stockman pattern back in 1986 prior to going overseas for his Birthday. Absolutely Gorgeous knife. Over the years, the quality has gone down dramatically. That's why I buy Old Faithfull, Buck, Schrade, Gerber, and yes Rough Ryder. I bought a large 5" Toothpick. Perfect fit and finish, razor sharp edge, gorgeous scales.
I'm with you. Case needs to step up their game. The latest Barlows just aren't up to the quality they should be. Depending on the price, I might let it slide but eventually it would aggravate me over time. That gap on the Doctor's knife is really annoying especially for the price you're paying. Case needs to stop trying to live off of their tang stamp and work on work on QC. I think you have given a fair assessment.
Just because its made in the USA don't mean it's made by people who care. It could be made by illegal immigrants or legal immigrants with unskilled hands. Or it could be made by low paid factory workers who don't care. At the end of the day, quality control is key and when products leave the factory unchecked, it is unacceptable that they charge so much money. I am all for supporting USA made products but I am not for paying more for lesser quality.
I’m aware of this so I recently purchased online two identical Case knives in a pattern I wanted as I could not locate any to inspect in hand locally. I used a dealer I had never used before but he honored my request for two hand picked knives in as close as collector grade as possible. The knives arrived and both had issues. One had a weak snap and the other an off centered main blade. Both had a sharp burr at the finger troil. He picked from over twenty in stock so I guess that’s the best it gets. On the positive, the bone stag was beautiful on both and they varied in the cut and color of their scales which was a plus.
I have read and heard that Case does very well using their highly buffed Stainless since they have a large "collector" following. The knife collectors of new Case knives typically buy based upon visual appeal and low or no maintenance. Case does a great job at making very attractive knives which has also helped continue this successful following. Unfortunately for them, collectors are starting to recognize the difference in quality between boutique companies like GEC and Case knifes made in the 70's and before (when the Case family still ran the company.) The first "new" Case I purchased in decades was the CV Barlow from you; great video!
I've bought 3 Case knives this year and have been pretty lucky but all 3 have something some might not except the best is my small stockman with stag, blade rub. My medium stockman a gap along the back springs and mini copperlock rounded blade tip. I'm happy with them but a collector might not. Thanks for sharing, and hopefully Case will listen 👍
That's sad . I've got at least 10 USA Schrade Stockmans in the Old Timer and Uncle Henry trim . None of them have blade rub anywhere . And Schrade was considered the brand that the average working stiff could afford . I surely miss the fact that Schrade is no longer there . The new company that produces abroad is still decent stuff from what ive seen but I haven't seen a new example of a stockman . If they can get that right , then they have my blessing .
I have 4 Case knives that the fit ‘n finish is very good in all respects. Then I decided to splurge and ordered from Case a Sodbuster Jr. in buffalo horn with S35VN. Landed this knife was just over $150, granted if you order directly from Case you’re going to pay a premium but I thought they’d be sending the best of the best considering the price and coming directly from them. Sadly that wasn’t the case, the blade was all the way over against the liner and there was a sharp burr on the handle that would catch your figure if not careful. Hard to understand how a knife consisting of premium materials would be put in the hands of someone with little experience and then not be checked through Quality Control before leaving their factory. SMH
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU. This finally needs to be said. I have maybe 53 Case knives in my collection, many collectors have more, but over time I can clearly see an absolute decline in quality, so much so that I have stopped buying new Case knives from the last 10 years. Blade play, hugely uneven grinds, no tips at all, covers and bolsters that have been sanded unevenly from each other (in many cases grotesquely so), mushy walk and talk, machining marks, gaps in covers AND bolsters, terrible centering, scratches on blades, blade rub in multi bladed models is the norm, even cracks in covers where they are pinned... This is absolutely ridiculous. It's as if they simply don't care, and think that you should be fine with the flaws because you are owning a Case product with the almighty Case name. It's shameful. This is American craftsmanship?? Do I really need to pay upwards of $200 on the secondary for a GEC that is flawless (because as soon as they drop they're gone, and the secondary market is the only place to get a popular GEC, and always at a premium). This wasn't the norm many years ago. I have several Rough Riders because they were pretty, and cheap, and the fit and finish far surpasses Case. I still don't understand how you can be fine with a manufacturing process that doesn't protect the tips on your knives. Is that so hard? I think if I order a Case that comes pointy I would have a heart attack. I used to cringe unboxing these knives because I know there is probably an 80/20 percent chance there will be a problem and I will have to live with it or go through the hassle of sending it back. Luckily reputable dealers will hand pick a knife for you if you ask, but again, like in your video here, if a dealer goes through 26 knives and every one of them are flawed, what do you do? Amazon (sight unseen) is right out. Of my 53 Case knives MOST have one problem or another, and the ones I have held onto I still keep because they ARE pretty, and shiny, but flawed. I cannot afford to be a GEC collector. I don't have the time, money and wear-with-all to be sitting with my account open and my finger poised over the mouse button to be able to secure a new GEC within 5 seconds of a new drop. So thank you for what you are saying in your video. It's like the Elephant in the room that Case simply doesn't even care about anymore. I'm sure they are aware of customer opinions, but they just don't care and it's sad. It would be nice to see a statement from Case that they are aware of what is leaving their factory, but I don't think we are going to see that. If anything, I can see their production moving to China, maybe the quality will finally improve. I'll probably get a few dislikes on this comment, but I speak the truth, and genuine knife guys know it. Great video, you're my new favorite person of the week. 👍🏻👍🏻
Now in all fairness , I just got twin new March of 2021 case knives and they are impressive . Maybe I just got lucky but maybe Case is pulling itself back together .
No. Some people in the comments says they have or “I never got a bad one” but on a recent trip to cabellas I looked at their Case knives and they’re pretty much the same.
I have bought 3x as many Case knives as I own...JUST SO I CAN GET knives that aren’t poor quality! I can live with small gaps, but blade wobble is an instant return. I know where I’ll order my future Case knives.
I had some issues about Case QC back in the 90’s but since then I’ve bought all my knives either in person or from Shepherd Hills. If I see a gap I open the blades and hold the knife up to a light, of light shines through it’s not acceptable.
I recently got a Rough Ryder Grandaddy Barlow, in buckshot bone, and the fit and finish was terrible, with really bad blade rub.. ! (I returned it for a full refund),, So, I thought I'd bite the bullet, and get a Case, to see if the quality is worth 3 times the cost,... So today, my slimline trapper arrived, it's got a slight gap beside the back spring, but the edge quality is possibly the worst of ANY knife I've bought in the last 30 years,!! I've just spent a couple of hours putting the edge right, and now it's a good knife.. But long story short,, it's the first and last Case I'll be buying, and I'm back to getting Rough Ryder, I've only had one "lemon" in the last few decades,, great video,,, just subbed,, all the best from across the pond,, John..
If a company has the means to create a knife that is basically flawless to the human eye, it should have the means to quality control those creations. I got a nasty one the other day. Blade not only rubs on the liner but cuts on the top of the lier to get there. I'm told by the store that Case do not consider this a defect. Gee, what then constitutes a defect?
I have notice the same problem with several Case knives I have purchased the last 2 years. Usually the ones I buy from Amazon trend to be less quality compared to retail stores like Sportman Warehouse, Cabelas or even ACE Hardware. I guess people return the lemons and they cycle them back? The most common issue besides the gap is the sharpness. The edge is always brittle, to the point that it feels like a serrated blade. For the price i expect something close to perfect. I stopped buying case because of that and also because in every purchase I have high chances of getting a bad one. Sorry Case. You lost a customer.
I have a decent 2016 case navy blue trapper with the oval American flag case shield. Bought it from a Ace hardware on clearance for 15 bucks. I have no clue why it didn't sell at full price since it seemed immaculate. I'm hoping some cases I ordered (case amber jig CV sod buster JR and peach seed jig CV large Stockman) are fitted right.
Dude, I just did a similar review/rant last week on Case knives. One of them came and it was awesome. The other one, which actually cost more, is a $7 gas station quality knife. Same company, same people making it. Their quality control is horrible.
I don’t want any gaps, blade centering that is off so far that it rubs the liner, cracked bone, or blade wobble. At all. I can put up with some flaws, but the reason that Case has been selling this JUNK is because we as consumers allow them to. I am at a point that I will only buy a Case if I handle it in person. I bought a CV chestnut jigged bone trapper. The centering was off a little, but there were 5 other identical knives that I handled before it that were embarrassingly poor quality. It’s sad because I love Case knives.
The fact that consumers allow it is spot on . Too many people just say "oh well" and don't stand up for their rights as a consumer . I take back stuff all the time when I feel it didn't last like it should have . I don't know anybody else that does . My money doesn't come easy and I won't put up with the BS
Dang, so i guess i am not the only one, i got the mini trapper in micarta and it’s got all of the issues mentioned, Blade wobble, ugly edge, and massive gap on the scale.
The biggest quality test a knife has to pass for me to purchase is the inspection of the backspring alignment with the liners. This is because it is the easiest place to check the overall quality of the build. one it passes, I look at the way the scales, bolsters. and pins are flush with each other. THEN i check the blades and walk and talk. If at that point there aren't any issues then i am prolly going to be happy purchasing it. The problem i have with online purchases is they do not show the individual knife i am going to purchase, but rather a sample of what they want me to think i'm getting. and if i am viewing the individual item then the pictures are either not good quality or they avoid showing the detail necessary for me to feel comfortable purchasing.
I ordered a new Case medium stockman about a month ago to replace my daily carry that I lost. Same knife but 25 years apart and different color covers. This one has a lot of blade drag, gaps, but is pretty to look at when closed. It has a light, and thin feel compared to my old one. I put it back in the box and will just give it to someone. Now carrying a very old Old Timer that my Dad had. I am disappointed in Case even though the dealer sent me the best one in their stock.
At least it's nice to know it's not just me James. I've been having to return Case knives for a litany of faults recently, and it's simply not good enough. A recent Mini Trapper in smooth chestnut bone was an absolute shocker and has stopped me buying Case knives unseen until I have reason to believe Case have addressed these issues. Rough Riders are variable, but I just bought one for £15 and I can't fault it. A Copperhead in Stag Bone, and it holds its own in any company. How does that work? But here in the UK we don't have far to go for shoddy knife workmanship and absolute contempt for the customer. It's called Sheffield - some honourable exceptions of course, but they are unfortunately exceptions.
I recently received a Case Sod Buster, Jr. with a rounded tip and a badly off-centered blade that nearly rubs the liner. Case approved my warranty repair so I sent it back today. That, plus a number of videos like yours has caused me to question my loyalty to Case. Please, Case, fix this. I love your company and want to buy more knives, but won't if these QC issues continue.
That Doctor's knife is gorgeous! I know it has a gap, but I still want one like that. Personally, I don't like gaps, yet they are a price you have to pay when getting a hand made knife. I have noticed that factory machine made knives don't have issues like that, so handcrafting the knives sometimes means that you will get differences between them. I have tried getting a GEC but can't. I have pretty much given up on looking for one. They are A, Extremely hard to find. And B, are Insanely expensive. I don't live in the USA so I can't easily get my hands on one... I think for traditional knives, I will stick with some more reliable brands. Such as Opinel, Otter Messer, Victorinox, Buck etc. I have also Bought a couple of Joseph Rodgers Sheffield knives, they have yet to arrive, however I have heard some great things about them.
I have pretty new Böker Trapper, from limited and numbered series, handmade. No gaps whatsoever. So, I don't agree with "price you have to pay when getting a hand made knife".
I have the same doctor's knife except with yellow handles and it has the same exact gap but I don't mind it too much. It also had two of the letters in the word case on the side of it black. I can see light through the other side when I clean the gunk out of it. I also have a broker tree brand Barlow that is at least 50 years old and has no blade play centering is perfect and no gaps.
I'm on my second mini trapper that I'm preparing to send back to Case to have out-of-factory blade wobble fixed. The only time I forgive blade wobble is if it's a cheaper knife like Frost or Rough Rider. From Case, I expect the blades to be solid, especially since they've recently raised their prices.
Great video! I wish more channels would speak the truth. My sample size is only one, but I ordered a Case peanut about two months ago and am quite happy with the quality, so I guess I won the luck of the draw. I must say that neither blade was even slightly sharp though. I sure hope Case steps up their quality game.
I realize this is an older video but I have also had issues with Case knives from 2019 -2020. Sent five knives back. Different patterns and different handle materials/style. The knives where a Tribal Lock in Blue bone, a Caribbean Blue Barlow, a Green bone stockman, a Purple stockman and a Mini Copperhead in the Barnboard jig. The Stockman knives had horrific blade rub. The Barlow had wobble and rock in the closed position. The Tribal lock had terrible blade play (side to side) and the shield popped out the first time the blade snapped closed. The Mini Copperhead main blade had hang-up on closing. This is a sad state of affairs for a historic company. My Case knives from when I started collecting the 90's were like jewelry compared to what's being produced today.
Sad . So far , the 2021 production looks promising . I just got two that were made in March and they are both very nice . If the stockman comes next week and fit and finish is as nice as the trapper I just got , I'll be impressed . Better not be blade rub . If Schrade could do it at a lesser cost than Case , there's no reason Case can't . It's coming from a dealer so if it's not right , they'll hear about it .
@Cloud . Yep . It with all of them . I think Case just puts a half assed grind on them thinking that everyone will put their own edge on them anyway . But for cryin out loud , you shouldn't have to . But that's an easy fix . Can always put and edge one them . But every single Rough Rider I've ever gotten is razor sharp out of the box . A better edge than I can do that for sure . Case really needs to step that up a bit if you get it on a 15 dollar knife .
A small gap does not bother me, after all the springs are moving parts and need some clearance. I have all sorts of Rough Ryder type knives as well as some Americans like Buck and Case. Close fitting of the springs and liners look really nice but I also have some new knives that are so hard to open that you need tool to open one. Every knife is different in its actions due to slight variations in thicknesses, rivet pressure etc. Sometimes you get one that has everything right. That goes for the Chinese jobs or the American made ones. I love Bucks but I always have to finish the manufacturing process to make the knife right for me. I also have a new Case Stockman that is just beautiful and everything looks and works perfectly. Luck? I also have some RR's that are also nice and work well too as well as some real stinkers. Sometimes you just have to wear the parts in.
This is is quite helpful, I bought a square bolster CV Medium Stockman and just figured that was what Stockmanns were like when the blade half stop was weak and the blade rub was bad, but I see now I should have looked into sending it back at the time
Schrade was producing flawless stockman patterns of all sizes in the '70's and confined to do so up till the time they closed the fires in the USA . And , they were dining it for a lot less than Case . There's no reason for blade rub if that stockman is coming from Case .
You know, my first knife was a case knife. I still have it and plan on passing it down to my son when the time is right. I recently started looking into buying new case knives. I found a few and had them shipped to me. I was really disappointed when I compared the new case knives to the old one. I have purchased a variety of different knives from different producers. I can say that the first and finish is a worthy of the price for Case Knives compared to other brands.. I have purchased a few old case lock backs and have decided to take the scales off and replace them with new bone scales. I recently took a shark tooth to a machine shop and had them fix my blade wiggle. It cost me $56.75. Not a bad price considering I put 70 into the knife. Altogether under 130.. From now on I’m not gonna waste my time or money on a new case knife. I have found that purchasing older case knives and having the blade wiggle taken out at the machine shop or putting new scales on is much more efficient. Sure I run the value as far as collecting but at least I have a functional life I am proud to pass down.. I am curious about the new hammerhead because it is at least aluminum. Kind a hard to mess up aluminum. I just hope the blade wiggle problem is fixed. I am kind of scared to get the hammer head and bone.
I just got two new Case knives . March of 2021 production . And they are impressive . Maybe I just got lucky . But I've got a stockman coming next week . We will see as the proof isn't in the pudding , but is if they can build a stockman with no blade rub .
@@Rancherinaz I will be looking for a new hammerhead soon. I would like to find one in a dark blue or purple something that looks like a great. Perhaps even indigo bone scales. I hear they are releasing some awesome color variations in bone this year.
I wish you still sold knives...the fact you go through and find decent ones to send out is amazing. Just had to return one because the blade centering was literally rubbing the brass liners because it was so uncentered. And a gap.
I remember when i got my hands on my first case knife. It was a Damascus trapper with crimson bone scales. My heart sank when I received it and noticed the bolsters were misaligned and the gap on the backspring is big enough to see daylight through. I had to accept the knife as is because it's still a beautiful knife and I live in the uk so return is out of the question. Will never buy a case again. Have stuck to GEC ever since.
This QC issue has been creeping over many years.im 60. When i was 15 i saved enough to buy a cheetah. The local hardware had them. The first one had pits in the blade. The second one also as well as the third one. Cheetas and Jaguars are premium knives from Case. Yet at 15 i walked away from Case over this issue
I love Case but...but...they have QC problems. I was looking for a doctors knife in Crandall jig bone olive green to complete a set. I looked through 14 knives before I found one acceptable between the gaps and blade wobble. I was thankful for the dealer's patience but wasn't too happy with Case. I've pretty much quit buying Case online. Don't get me starting on the blade grinds.
Seeing as this video is a year old, I’m extremely sad about what case knives has become... and being let down literally hundreds of times. I now only buy case knives from the 70’s and before. As expensive and tedious as it is to find great mint examples from that era, I believe those to be the epitome of case knives. I can say that the knives I’ve sent back to case knives to have issues fixed they have come back flawless, but the hassle of buying, being let down, sending it off for a month or two and coming back to be satisfied. It sucks... just saying it sucks.
Man, I’m 60 years old. I’ve owned top of the line Shrade Old Timers, old Case folders, old Camillus knives, passed down from my father that were made in the 50’s and 60’s. Back when every knife we knew was made in America. High-carbon steel that required care to prevent rusting. Nothing you could do about the natural patina that formed over the years, but all great steel was that way. The Old Timers were sharpened at 10 to 15 degrees and absolutely razor sharp. One slip and you were cut. Nothing like this stainless alloy, “super steels” sharpened at this 20 degrees nonsense. The big seller is, “Hey, it doesn’t rust, it’s not like you’re going to use it anyway, and it’s made in China. Doesn’t get scary sharp and it’s cheap. We have thousands of them, get yours now!” And I remember when real good knives turned into okay knives, then total crap knives. It was when our old carbon steel was too expensive and brittle for the amateurs and nobody really used knives for important things like camping and carving a bear out of a pine burl. They’re all indoors playing video games and don’t even own a bicycle for Christ’s sake, and so of course knives became a novelty item instead of a necessary tool. But all we had is back spring folders and they were meticulously precision made with of course no gaps between the spacers and springs. Kinda sad how Case and Shrade as well, sold out and just got lazy. Lousy stainless blade steel, shoddy workmanship, and just no care. The reason is, the market for old classic remakes is dying off. Old collectors aren’t going to collect crappy copies and new collectors want to collect new knives. I have some very old classics that can’t be replaced. I also have some very new flippers and frame locks that are way more practical than any two-handed opening pocket knife. And it’s only more practical because I’m not competing with my cousin in carving the better bear. I use my new fancy knives to open envelopes and packages. Cut string sometimes. You don’t need a real knife for that. Love your channel. Just subscribed. Sorry for the rant from a grouchy old knife guy.
I just bought a brand new Case kickstart trapperlock and it has tons of issues with it. The case logo on the handle wasn't glued in or held in in anyway, the jigging on the handles is screwed up and in the space where three jigged spots should be there is only one long jig. The blades edge hadn't been completely sharpened and still had a burr on the edge from grinding the edge onto the blade. There was still polishing rouge inside the handle and the lockup on the blade when opened has probably an 1/8th inch of play front to back and a little side to side. The handles look like they aren't fully shaped yet. It just seems like they accidentally skipped all of the finishing steps except for polishing. I filled out a warranty form so we'll see if they can get me a good knife because there is no fixing this knife with all of the blade play.
I'll never buy a case knife again. Bought a 130$ collector's edition knife for my grandfather as a Christmas gift. It had a quarter inch unpolished finish on the blade with the engraving.. three week response time. Customer service was completely incompetent.
@@J__C__ Yep. The complete incompetence of customer service is whats made me unwilling to do business with them anymore. And the irony that your calling me a "dumbass like most of the general public". While simultaneously reverting to hurling insults at strangers on the internet, proving yourself to be completely general and common, isn't lost on me. And your logic is also completely and utterly lacking. Is it MY job to keep purchasing products until they can get it right?? Maybe I should just spend another 130$ and keep my fingers crossed this time? #IQunder80 Your damn right I'll stop doing business with a company after one bad interaction. Especially when indeffernce and incompetence is involved. I'll use a common phrase you can comprehend, " fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me". And, I'M the common dumbass in this conversation? Give me a break. Go to your local bar and call complete strangers dumbasses internet toughguy.
I’ve Yet to order a case online, or purchase one in store that didn’t have noticeable quality issues. I was told by multiple people that I just need to shell out the money to get a collector quality case because they don’t have those issues. I just spent 90 bucks on a Caribbean blue bone copper lock. There is a gap so big between the bone handle scale and brass liner, that I can see the lockbar pivot between the scale and liner. I still love the knife and the way it looks but man it sucks
Ok, so I have collected Case knives for 20+ years. I had over 100 in my collection. I didn’t like it but I was used to the $hitty quality, the gaps, the lame walk and talk. And then I bought my first Great Eastern Cutlery Knife. I sold 100 Case knives just to buy 25 Great Eastern. Great Eastern knives are without a doubt the finest production knives on the market. I still have a few Case but they are all pre 1980.
Glad to see someone else with the same opinion. I know guys that swear by them. I point out the gaps and bad grinds and all that and get back oh well no one's perfect. Which is true. Some of my GEC knives have small gaps or slightly uneven grinds but those are small cosmetic issues that I have to examine it closely to find. I have seen the same kind of issues as you show here. Yea at half the price I don't expect custom level f&f. Don't send out warped and burnt blades with bowed back spacers and cracked handles though. I can go get a modern locking folder from China now a days that has a tool steel blade with a decent (not great but plenty good enough) heat treat. Ball bearing pivot and amazing finishing and almost no flaws for 50 bucks. The kind of quality I used to spend over $150 to get years ago. I love traditional knives and I would absolutely love to have more than a few companies making good ones. There's a few case knives that would look nice with my Northwoods, GEC, Victorinox collection. Not until they match quality with price though. To me, they just look and feel cheap.
Just bought a Vintage Bone Sway Back at the Case/Zippo store in Bradford. When I took it out the box to look at it, one of the pins fell out. I filed an on-line warranty claim. We shall see how it’s handled...
I have russlock clip point and it's got gaps and blade play in all directions. That being said, I still like the purchase because I love the russlock design but I have been meaning to send it back in.
I doubt it. Between handle material, maybe, but that's but that's not the case. It's always between the brass and the back spring. I think it would take a very great temp change to cause all that flex/gap.
You said at the end of the video that all slipjoints have some gap. I have a James Brand The County Knife (made in China) and its fit and finish is perfect. How does this happen??? Yet, 2/3 of my Case were sent back due to problems. I guess it is a matter of volume produced and the bean counters at Case have a say.
Sounds like Case has a real issue with consistent QC, I have been happy with all the knives I have received from you and appreciate your caring enough to do secondary inspection, to bad Case doesn't care more. I have already heard the same thing about QC issues from other folks regarding Case so it seems the word is out whether it is justified or not, dissatisfied people do talk, are you listening Case?
Gap A and B I'd live with but C is no good. I got a barlow from you, beautiful fit and finish but pretty dull, wouldn't cut paper. Easily remedied (20 minutes on some stones and strop) but definitely a QC issue. I've seen the same issues with other brands that mass produce. These issues seem to come in waves.
I buy several Case knives a year. Mostly trappers & stockman. Have had one with a weak back spring. A few with blade play. Blade play seems more common in the stockman. Overall I’ve been pleased with fit & finish. I probably have 50 plus from 70’s 10 dot to present. Knives in video should have definitely had better QC. Also have had several Benchmade with blade play from factory. If you pay that much for USA made knives. You expect a closer inspection prior to shipping.
Hey man. Love your videos, and I'm glad to see someone calling out case, that said, I'm really interested in the brown bone Barlow. I was wondering if there was any way you could procure one. I've had a difficult time finding one. I'd really appreciate it. Thanks.
I was going to order a Case knife online and now I'm thinking no. I just returned a Rough Ryder rr304, large sod buster($16.89), the blade was so far off center that the liner was scratching the blade. Not worth keeping at any price. Recently bought an Eafengrow, ball bearing flipper with nearly a 4" blade, for $17. And its seriously good. And I believe a dud is rare. I wonder why Case cant make it happen anymore?
Glad I have seen this I have a collection of Rough Rider knives but thought I would like one quality knife and Case sprang to mind, now quite dubious. What do you think of buck 110 ? Would you call that a quality knife?
I have a Frost elephant toenail that is perfect in every way. Much much better than what you're showing. Two Marble knives also beautiful and perfect better that the Case knives you're featuring
I only have two Case knives. A trapper and a stockman. The stockman had to be returned because it developed a serious backspring problem. The replacement, after a year, now has a weak backspring. It cost me $78 delivered. Not a vast sum in the knife collecting year but one would expect a knife of reasonable quality for that amount. I shan't buy another Case knife.
Yeah, I've been noticing more and more issues with Case knives lately. Those gaps are pretty awful. I recently purchased the sawcut brown bone Barlow in CV and one side was COMPLETELY SMOOTH!! No sawcut to it at all. Plus the walk and talk is kinda weak on the main blade. I was disappointed, but decided to keep it as an everyday user. I guess I should have sent it to them for a warranty repair, but I've heard some horror stories about knives coming back worse than when they were sent in to them. I don't think it was worth the $65 I paid for it... I buy a lot of knives and I've noticed Case has been struggling with their QC. I hope it improves soon... if not, I'll probably just stick with GEC going forward. Thanks for the honest rant. - Jim
BCV Piper I’ve seen those issues too. There is more and more I haven’t mentioned. I’m about to make a log book of crazy crap I see come out of case lol
Just bought a new Case Tony Bose Panama. Gaps weren’t the only thing wrong. The main blade wobbled back and forth when open. Secondary blade would rub liner so bad when closing you had to push it in. Walk and talk? 🤣 NO😑 returned very next day!
Bought two of the 2021 peachseed amber copperheads. BOTH had almost no snap. Springs like butter. I don't collect these things. I use them. But I won't use one that will close on my hand. Here's a little story for you. These are the same issues Queen Cutlery had. Now the Chinese make them... I have a Chinese made Browning gunstock. It's superbly made. Cost? Less than 10 bucks at the time. Case better wake up.
I just recieve two Case knives from SMKW and they are both really nice . Beyond expectation . One is a crimson peach seed trapper and the other is a rough Delrin sod buster jr . I've got a medium stockman coming from Keystone knives this week . I'm hoping I'm just as satisfied there . The proof will be in the stockman .
I really appreciate your content. I've always been a case fan due to being from PA. However after watching your videos I went against getting a bose stockman and got an otter messer anchor instead. Hopefully they fix their issues. Very sad
@@slipjointguy Thanks for replying 19min 40 secs into the vid 😃 pity as the purple one looks good iv been thinking of buying one but now im thinking twice .
@@slipjointguyI'm from Scotland the nearest place too purchase is the country of Wales so mail order only but great company they are HH nvr had a prob but if i did theyd sure deal with it glad came across your vids as i was led to believe case were the better brand .
Hi . I’ve just found this channel and it’s great to see an honest review of the dropping standards on case . I’m actually looking to buy a black canvas case hawkbill but they aren’t available in the uk in black micarta . I’m happy to purchase from the US bug I don’t want to play Russian roulette with quality issues . Could you help ?
The gaps that you pointed out are not acceptable, in a Case knife selling for $60 - $80, but I probably wouldn't complain if the same gaps were noticed in a Rough Rider. The gaps scare me because I anticipate future blade wobble developing. In a Rough Rider costing $20.00, the option of replacing the knife a couple of years down the road is not economically difficult. But with the Case, if wobble developed a few years after purchase and I had not returned the knife at time of purchase...I would feel like an idiot. In other words , my fault for not taking Case to point at purchase. Both companies have "forever" warranties, but I expect better from a $80 knife than I do from a $20 knife. And the gaps that you indicated on those Case knives...not acceptable! I agree with JerseyKnife Guy...maybe all Case knives should be handled before purchase...a sad state of affairs. Personally I'm tending towards Rough Rider more and more, though I've only had one Case that should never have left the factory. But if you sold those Case knives to me...I would be disappointed, and maybe I would stop doing business with you.
ive bought 5 case knives, four went into the trash and 1 (OUT OF FIVE!!!!!!) was okay. I remember being so excited for a yellow delrin trapper and spent my hard earned money on it and it was ABSOLUTE CRAP! Ive also had 1 with burned edges too.
Wow ! Just wow ! That's terrible . I just got two brand new 3/2021 Case knives . They are truly impressive . Zero gaps . Fit and finish is perfect although bled alignment isn't absolutely perfect but still easily well within being acceptable .
If I get it for actually using and carrying it doesn't bother me, if it's for collecting and I paid more than $50 it would bother me. I usually buy them from true value hardware or the farm store so I can hand select. It'd be cool if they had a grading system and then collectors could get the perfect knives and people who use them for edc can buy the lower grades or "seconds".
A gap wouldn't bother me for EDC knives, but lack of snap or blades rubbing against liners actually effects the usability of the knife. Weak Snap is very unacceptable for me because thats a safety flaw
Gaps as wide as a business card ?!?!! Seriously ? For him to even admit that is shamefull . The biggest gap on any of the dozen or so Rough Riders I own is hard to maybe get a sliver of notebook paper into . But in all fairness , I just recieved two brand new offerings from Case that were both produced in March of 2021 and they are impressive . I mean I'm really impressed . The only thing that is lacking is that blade centering isn't perfect . It's well within acceptable and no blade comes close to a liner but they are dead center . I've got another coming next week and it's a stockman , so we will see if we get the same fit and finish as well as if the thing will have zero blade rub as all my USA Old Timers and Uncle Henry's possess .
I live in Europe, so Case knives are neither common nor being propelled by nostalgia here. I have only handled 2 Case knives. First one ever was Case/Bose collaboration Coffin Jack, that I bought as a middleman for a friend. It had beautiful jigging, but it had noticeable blade play on the main blade! Much bigger than on my RR Trapper. Sure it was pre-owned and used, but still it appeared to be out of place on a 'premium' knife like that. Second one is my very first own Case - Swayback Gent. I explained the seller that it is going to be my very first Case and that I really want to like the brand; that the knife would be forwarded to me to Europe and that my ability to return the knife will be very limited. So I asked to pick me a nice one... And... it is amazing? No gaps, spot on centering, polished, unbelievable jigging and dye job. It snaps, but walk an talk is a bit lazy, but I consider it to be a trade-off for having the spring flush in all three positions. Yes, shield could be more sunken and the grind more even towards the tip, but even being a GEC fanboy I have to say this Case can take on any GEC I ever handled especially in terms of jigging and dye. But again I have heard a fellow knife enthusiast complaining about burnt tip.
I've got $5 to $10 Sanrenmu slipjoints that are absolutely perfect. Flawless fit and finish. So in my opinion this is unacceptable from Case at that price point. Mind you, $50 is not cheap. It may be cheaper than GEC knives but it's not cheap. Gaps and blade play are totally unnecessary in this modern era.
Ron Broeders hmmm...that may be the case, no pun intended, however...your Sanrenmu knives aren’t Case knives. The collectibility factor with Case’s product eclipses their quality, for better or worse. People just like the fact they are traditional and American and are available in so many pretty colors lol...most of the fancy handled knives are going right into the safe these days. The less expensive and even more roughly finished delrin handled knives you see on the end caps at Home Depot and Ace Hardware are the probably the small majority of Case knives sold today that actually get used, I.e taken out of box, box tossed away, sharpened up and banging around in a tool box for the next 10-20 years. I personally carry vintage IXL, Case and Buck penknives and have done so for the last 20 years. Some of my everyday knives have included: a heavily sharpened Case tested 3347 I bought from Jerry Skelton in the early 90’s (gave it to my grandad), an old Case tested whittler with worn down blades (but what was left was great, sharp steel), a 70’s Buck 309 with handmade copper handled and a 1900 era IXL 3” penknife with ivory celluloid handles. All of these knives, well the Case and the IXL anyway have way better blade grinds and steel than modern Case factory knives. I probably paid less than $40 each for the knives I’ve just described. If you really want a good honest carrying knife, buy a slightly worn down Case 70’s carbon steel stock pattern or two blade jack or penknife. You can still buy them, rust, paint spots and all, on eBay for less that $40 if you get lucky. You might need to spend sometime cleaning it or tuning up the blade action with a ball pein hammer. Sharpen it up and go over it with some steel wool and you will have a good knife with character that was meant to be used from the beginning, that will last the rest of your life if you’re careful with it. The modern Case factory items in the $60-70+ retail price range are like Hummel figurines or collectible spoons from tourist locations. Sure they can be used, but that’s not why people are buying them today. By the 80’s Case and many other makers were aware of this fact and started doing all the cute “series” knives and all that. As interesting as some of the Case 80’s knives were, you could see the fit and finish and attention to detail slipping away. I have had the privilege of comparing several models against one another and sadly I think the 80’s was Case’s low point. I had a beautiful XX M279 and I’ve compared it to a 70’s, 80’s and modern version of the same pattern. The XX era knife is so smooth and well fitted, excellent blade grinds and finish. Nice snap and action 70+ years later. The 80’s knife looked like it was made by a big machine with poor tolerances, visible grind lines, rough edges, spacers (vs careful grinding) to get the blades to fit the recesses, etc. Literally no comparisons! And while the fancy higher end retail Case knives of today might be a good business model (make people want to just keep buying them) but that model is not with the serious user in mind. It is what it is guys! Those who have ears to hear let them hear! Lol
Jacob Norman it’s sad man. Case “quality” And people get so pissed at me for telling them their favorite brand is ripping them off. Return that knife if you can.
@@slipjointguy I was going to, but they are out of them, It's a user knife, so not the end of the world, but I live on SS disability, and hate wasting money for less than china made quality. Case customers are paying for a Ford truck and getting go carts, damned shame, I've carried Case for 40 years and never been this disappointed in a US company
Jacob Norman best thing to do is call case and complain and demand them to fix it at their cost. Don’t pay shipping. If they tell you they won’t pay shipping, tell them you’ll go on their Facebook and leave a negative review with pictures. Then they will bend over backwards for you.
Would like case to produce more cv but they have changed it to cs .I guess it's kind of the same thing.But I would take any bad knife with a gap as long as the snap is there and the blade doesn't wiggle but it would have to be half price
I bought a couple Case Trappers locally where I live, and both of them the spey blades were "spongy." So I asked the salesperson if I could look at the rest of them to find one that I liked. Every single one of the Trappers had spongy, spey blades that went back too far. Every one. I've been to other stores and the spey blades were fine. It's hit or miss. Buyer beware.
I just got a new Case trapper . March 2021 production . The thing is totally impressive . Maybe they are getting serious again . Maybe I just got lucky ?
I have a case Trapper that does the same thing and the back spring put grooves in the Tang of the blade and the walk and talk is terrible. It's like dragging a piano down a gravel driveway.
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Best video I’ve seen in months. So many truths. We want CV. We want quality and will pay for it. Bravo 🙌
I'd be ok with the gaps for 20-30, but I would be pretty unhappy if I paid 60-70
Absolutely 💯
My biggest concern regarding any gap in any knife is how much worst will that gap become after use
Any gap is unacceptable
I think its horrific that so many American companies are starting to not give a shit about their product
We do care clown
I just purchased my first Case knife. Thank you for educating me on what I need to look out for! Very informative video!
I certainly respect a seller that does QC filtering before shipping to a customer. Man! I think I will buy from you. Most sellers scoff at me if I ask them to check for blade centering and blade play/wobble.
I have a local case dealer that only sells the best quality knives. Never had a gap or a centering problem. I’m really thankful.
Pretty much all of the Case knives I've ever bought have had gaps. I don't really get too annoyed unless there's blade wiggle.
I’m with you on the gapping, it doesn’t bother me as much, but the blade wobble is my pet peeve. I’ve watched your videos, and I’ve seen the hammer marks on your Winchester Sunfish, which is how a few of mine are. I actually started getting into moose patterns from watching your stuff, and have acquired a few cool Winchester moose knives from the Bill Howard years at Queen. One of my favs, is a Robeson moose from 94, perfect example of how amazing Queen could be. As good as any of their Shatts, in my opinion. Red bone, is gorgeous. Gotta love eBay right. Anyways, stay cool brother
Thanks for bringing this problem up as I’ve got a two bladed Case Barlow which is not that bad but there is a gap, but to be honest it’s only about a inch long I looked closer and noticed it’s the back spring bar that was badly machined which is bloody annoying as the rest of the knife is spot on. So come on Case get your act together I know you can do it. I’m going to take a pic of it and send it to case and see what they say, as I live in the UK I won’t be sending it back. Thanks for posting!!!
Last Case I bought was for my dad, a 3 blade stockman pattern back in 1986 prior to going overseas for his Birthday. Absolutely Gorgeous knife. Over the years, the quality has gone down dramatically. That's why I buy Old Faithfull, Buck, Schrade, Gerber, and yes Rough Ryder. I bought a large 5" Toothpick. Perfect fit and finish, razor sharp edge, gorgeous scales.
By the way, really appreciate your integrity and making sure you don't send out a knife with f&f issues and for also calling out case.
Agree, case quantity control is lacking lately...I've gone to sak alox models and their quality is top notch.
Victorinox QC is incredible for their price. I have no idea how they do it.
I'm with you. Case needs to step up their game. The latest Barlows just aren't up to the quality they should be. Depending on the price, I might let it slide but eventually it would aggravate me over time. That gap on the Doctor's knife is really annoying especially for the price you're paying. Case needs to stop trying to live off of their tang stamp and work on work on QC. I think you have given a fair assessment.
Just because its made in the USA don't mean it's made by people who care. It could be made by illegal immigrants or legal immigrants with unskilled hands. Or it could be made by low paid factory workers who don't care. At the end of the day, quality control is key and when products leave the factory unchecked, it is unacceptable that they charge so much money. I am all for supporting USA made products but I am not for paying more for lesser quality.
I’m aware of this so I recently purchased online two identical Case knives in a pattern I wanted as I could not locate any to inspect in hand locally. I used a dealer I had never used before but he honored my request for two hand picked knives in as close as collector grade as possible. The knives arrived and both had issues. One had a weak snap and the other an off centered main blade. Both had a sharp burr at the finger troil. He picked from over twenty in stock so I guess that’s the best it gets. On the positive, the bone stag was beautiful on both and they varied in the cut and color of their scales which was a plus.
I have read and heard that Case does very well using their highly buffed Stainless since they have a large "collector" following. The knife collectors of new Case knives typically buy based upon visual appeal and low or no maintenance. Case does a great job at making very attractive knives which has also helped continue this successful following. Unfortunately for them, collectors are starting to recognize the difference in quality between boutique companies like GEC and Case knifes made in the 70's and before (when the Case family still ran the company.) The first "new" Case I purchased in decades was the CV Barlow from you; great video!
I've bought 3 Case knives this year and have been pretty lucky but all 3 have something some might not except the best is my small stockman with stag, blade rub. My medium stockman a gap along the back springs and mini copperlock rounded blade tip. I'm happy with them but a collector might not. Thanks for sharing, and hopefully Case will listen 👍
That's sad . I've got at least 10 USA Schrade Stockmans in the Old Timer and Uncle Henry trim . None of them have blade rub anywhere . And Schrade was considered the brand that the average working stiff could afford . I surely miss the fact that Schrade is no longer there .
The new company that produces abroad is still decent stuff from what ive seen but I haven't seen a new example of a stockman . If they can get that right , then they have my blessing .
I have 4 Case knives that the fit ‘n finish is very good in all respects. Then I decided to splurge and ordered from Case a Sodbuster Jr. in buffalo horn with S35VN. Landed this knife was just over $150, granted if you order directly from Case you’re going to pay a premium but I thought they’d be sending the best of the best considering the price and coming directly from them. Sadly that wasn’t the case, the blade was all the way over against the liner and there was a sharp burr on the handle that would catch your figure if not careful. Hard to understand how a knife consisting of premium materials would be put in the hands of someone with little experience and then not be checked through Quality Control before leaving their factory. SMH
THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU. This finally needs to be said. I have maybe 53 Case knives in my collection, many collectors have more, but over time I can clearly see an absolute decline in quality, so much so that I have stopped buying new Case knives from the last 10 years. Blade play, hugely uneven grinds, no tips at all, covers and bolsters that have been sanded unevenly from each other (in many cases grotesquely so), mushy walk and talk, machining marks, gaps in covers AND bolsters, terrible centering, scratches on blades, blade rub in multi bladed models is the norm, even cracks in covers where they are pinned... This is absolutely ridiculous. It's as if they simply don't care, and think that you should be fine with the flaws because you are owning a Case product with the almighty Case name. It's shameful. This is American craftsmanship?? Do I really need to pay upwards of $200 on the secondary for a GEC that is flawless (because as soon as they drop they're gone, and the secondary market is the only place to get a popular GEC, and always at a premium). This wasn't the norm many years ago. I have several Rough Riders because they were pretty, and cheap, and the fit and finish far surpasses Case. I still don't understand how you can be fine with a manufacturing process that doesn't protect the tips on your knives. Is that so hard? I think if I order a Case that comes pointy I would have a heart attack. I used to cringe unboxing these knives because I know there is probably an 80/20 percent chance there will be a problem and I will have to live with it or go through the hassle of sending it back. Luckily reputable dealers will hand pick a knife for you if you ask, but again, like in your video here, if a dealer goes through 26 knives and every one of them are flawed, what do you do? Amazon (sight unseen) is right out. Of my 53 Case knives MOST have one problem or another, and the ones I have held onto I still keep because they ARE pretty, and shiny, but flawed. I cannot afford to be a GEC collector. I don't have the time, money and wear-with-all to be sitting with my account open and my finger poised over the mouse button to be able to secure a new GEC within 5 seconds of a new drop. So thank you for what you are saying in your video. It's like the Elephant in the room that Case simply doesn't even care about anymore. I'm sure they are aware of customer opinions, but they just don't care and it's sad. It would be nice to see a statement from Case that they are aware of what is leaving their factory, but I don't think we are going to see that. If anything, I can see their production moving to China, maybe the quality will finally improve. I'll probably get a few dislikes on this comment, but I speak the truth, and genuine knife guys know it. Great video, you're my new favorite person of the week. 👍🏻👍🏻
Exactly . ☝️☝☝☝
Now in all fairness , I just got twin new March of 2021 case knives and they are impressive . Maybe I just got lucky but maybe Case is pulling itself back together .
It’s almost like they are already made in China and we don’t deserve to know it. Welcome to the New World Order.
Has the quality improved since this video was made two years ago. Wanted to buy my first Case but seeing this makes me reluctant.
No. Some people in the comments says they have or “I never got a bad one” but on a recent trip to cabellas I looked at their Case knives and they’re pretty much the same.
I have bought 3x as many Case knives as I own...JUST SO I CAN GET knives that aren’t poor quality! I can live with small gaps, but blade wobble is an instant return. I know where I’ll order my future Case knives.
I had some issues about Case QC back in the 90’s but since then I’ve bought all my knives either in person or from Shepherd Hills. If I see a gap I open the blades and hold the knife up to a light, of light shines through it’s not acceptable.
I recently got a Rough Ryder Grandaddy Barlow, in buckshot bone, and the fit and finish was terrible, with really bad blade rub.. !
(I returned it for a full refund),,
So, I thought I'd bite the bullet, and get a Case, to see if the quality is worth 3 times the cost,...
So today, my slimline trapper arrived, it's got a slight gap beside the back spring, but the edge quality is possibly the worst of ANY knife I've bought in the last 30 years,!!
I've just spent a couple of hours putting the edge right, and now it's a good knife..
But long story short,, it's the first and last Case I'll be buying, and I'm back to getting Rough Ryder, I've only had one "lemon" in the last few decades,, great video,,, just subbed,, all the best from across the pond,, John..
If a company has the means to create a knife that is basically flawless to the human eye, it should have the means to quality control those creations. I got a nasty one the other day. Blade not only rubs on the liner but cuts on the top of the lier to get there. I'm told by the store that Case do not consider this a defect. Gee, what then constitutes a defect?
I have notice the same problem with several Case knives I have purchased the last 2 years. Usually the ones I buy from Amazon trend to be less quality compared to retail stores like Sportman Warehouse, Cabelas or even ACE Hardware. I guess people return the lemons and they cycle them back?
The most common issue besides the gap is the sharpness. The edge is always brittle, to the point that it feels like a serrated blade.
For the price i expect something close to perfect. I stopped buying case because of that and also because in every purchase I have high chances of getting a bad one.
Sorry Case. You lost a customer.
I have a decent 2016 case navy blue trapper with the oval American flag case shield. Bought it from a Ace hardware on clearance for 15 bucks. I have no clue why it didn't sell at full price since it seemed immaculate. I'm hoping some cases I ordered (case amber jig CV sod buster JR and peach seed jig CV large Stockman) are fitted right.
Yeah I just got a new stockman medium, it's polished nice, slight gap, not a huge deal, but all 3 blades have an uneven grind.
Case still lacking
Dude, I just did a similar review/rant last week on Case knives. One of them came and it was awesome. The other one, which actually cost more, is a $7 gas station quality knife. Same company, same people making it. Their quality control is horrible.
Little back gaps I can do. Blade wobble I will not tolerate. I just bought a sod buster Last weekend it's all over the place
I don’t want any gaps, blade centering that is off so far that it rubs the liner, cracked bone, or blade wobble. At all. I can put up with some flaws, but the reason that Case has been selling this JUNK is because we as consumers allow them to. I am at a point that I will only buy a Case if I handle it in person. I bought a CV chestnut jigged bone trapper. The centering was off a little, but there were 5 other identical knives that I handled before it that were embarrassingly poor quality. It’s sad because I love Case knives.
The fact that consumers allow it is spot on . Too many people just say "oh well" and don't stand up for their rights as a consumer . I take back stuff all the time when I feel it didn't last like it should have . I don't know anybody else that does . My money doesn't come easy and I won't put up with the BS
Dang, so i guess i am not the only one, i got the mini trapper in micarta and it’s got all of the issues mentioned, Blade wobble, ugly edge, and massive gap on the scale.
The biggest quality test a knife has to pass for me to purchase is the inspection of the backspring alignment with the liners. This is because it is the easiest place to check the overall quality of the build. one it passes, I look at the way the scales, bolsters. and pins are flush with each other. THEN i check the blades and walk and talk. If at that point there aren't any issues then i am prolly going to be happy purchasing it. The problem i have with online purchases is they do not show the individual knife i am going to purchase, but rather a sample of what they want me to think i'm getting. and if i am viewing the individual item then the pictures are either not good quality or they avoid showing the detail necessary for me to feel comfortable purchasing.
I ordered a new Case medium stockman about a month ago to replace my daily carry that I lost. Same knife but 25 years apart and different color covers. This one has a lot of blade drag, gaps, but is pretty to look at when closed. It has a light, and thin feel compared to my old one. I put it back in the box and will just give it to someone. Now carrying a very old Old Timer that my Dad had. I am disappointed in Case even though the dealer sent me the best one in their stock.
At least it's nice to know it's not just me James. I've been having to return Case knives for a litany of faults recently, and it's simply not good enough. A recent Mini Trapper in smooth chestnut bone was an absolute shocker and has stopped me buying Case knives unseen until I have reason to believe Case have addressed these issues.
Rough Riders are variable, but I just bought one for £15 and I can't fault it. A Copperhead in Stag Bone, and it holds its own in any company. How does that work?
But here in the UK we don't have far to go for shoddy knife workmanship and absolute contempt for the customer. It's called Sheffield - some honourable exceptions of course, but they are unfortunately exceptions.
I recently received a Case Sod Buster, Jr. with a rounded tip and a badly off-centered blade that nearly rubs the liner. Case approved my warranty repair so I sent it back today. That, plus a number of videos like yours has caused me to question my loyalty to Case. Please, Case, fix this. I love your company and want to buy more knives, but won't if these QC issues continue.
That Doctor's knife is gorgeous! I know it has a gap, but I still want one like that. Personally, I don't like gaps, yet they are a price you have to pay when getting a hand made knife. I have noticed that factory machine made knives don't have issues like that, so handcrafting the knives sometimes means that you will get differences between them. I have tried getting a GEC but can't. I have pretty much given up on looking for one. They are A, Extremely hard to find. And B, are Insanely expensive. I don't live in the USA so I can't easily get my hands on one... I think for traditional knives, I will stick with some more reliable brands. Such as Opinel, Otter Messer, Victorinox, Buck etc. I have also Bought a couple of Joseph Rodgers Sheffield knives, they have yet to arrive, however I have heard some great things about them.
I have pretty new Böker Trapper, from limited and numbered series, handmade. No gaps whatsoever. So, I don't agree with "price you have to pay when getting a hand made knife".
I have the same doctor's knife except with yellow handles and it has the same exact gap but I don't mind it too much. It also had two of the letters in the word case on the side of it black. I can see light through the other side when I clean the gunk out of it. I also have a broker tree brand Barlow that is at least 50 years old and has no blade play centering is perfect and no gaps.
I'm on my second mini trapper that I'm preparing to send back to Case to have out-of-factory blade wobble fixed. The only time I forgive blade wobble is if it's a cheaper knife like Frost or Rough Rider. From Case, I expect the blades to be solid, especially since they've recently raised their prices.
Great video! I wish more channels would speak the truth. My sample size is only one, but I ordered a Case peanut about two months ago and am quite happy with the quality, so I guess I won the luck of the draw. I must say that neither blade was even slightly sharp though. I sure hope Case steps up their quality game.
I just bought 2 Buck knives from Wal-Mart a stockman and canoe both made in China fit and finish is perfect.
I realize this is an older video but I have also had issues with Case knives from 2019 -2020. Sent five knives back. Different patterns and different handle materials/style. The knives where a Tribal Lock in Blue bone, a Caribbean Blue Barlow, a Green bone stockman, a Purple stockman and a Mini Copperhead in the Barnboard jig. The Stockman knives had horrific blade rub. The Barlow had wobble and rock in the closed position. The Tribal lock had terrible blade play (side to side) and the shield popped out the first time the blade snapped closed. The Mini Copperhead main blade had hang-up on closing. This is a sad state of affairs for a historic company. My Case knives from when I started collecting the 90's were like jewelry compared to what's being produced today.
Sad .
So far , the 2021 production looks promising . I just got two that were made in March and they are both very nice .
If the stockman comes next week and fit and finish is as nice as the trapper I just got , I'll be impressed . Better not be blade rub . If Schrade could do it at a lesser cost than Case , there's no reason Case can't . It's coming from a dealer so if it's not right , they'll hear about it .
@Cloud . Yep . It with all of them . I think Case just puts a half assed grind on them thinking that everyone will put their own edge on them anyway . But for cryin out loud , you shouldn't have to . But that's an easy fix . Can always put and edge one them . But every single Rough Rider I've ever gotten is razor sharp out of the box . A better edge than I can do that for sure . Case really needs to step that up a bit if you get it on a 15 dollar knife .
A small gap does not bother me, after all the springs are moving parts and need some clearance. I have all sorts of Rough Ryder type knives as well as some Americans like Buck and Case. Close fitting of the springs and liners look really nice but I also have some new knives that are so hard to open that you need tool to open one. Every knife is different in its actions due to slight variations in thicknesses, rivet pressure etc. Sometimes you get one that has everything right. That goes for the Chinese jobs or the American made ones. I love Bucks but I always have to finish the manufacturing process to make the knife right for me. I also have a new Case Stockman that is just beautiful and everything looks and works perfectly. Luck? I also have some RR's that are also nice and work well too as well as some real stinkers. Sometimes you just have to wear the parts in.
You are very honest and fair man super like to your work and honesty
This is is quite helpful, I bought a square bolster CV Medium Stockman and just figured that was what Stockmanns were like when the blade half stop was weak and the blade rub was bad, but I see now I should have looked into sending it back at the time
Schrade was producing flawless stockman patterns of all sizes in the '70's and confined to do so up till the time they closed the fires in the USA . And , they were dining it for a lot less than Case . There's no reason for blade rub if that stockman is coming from Case .
You know, my first knife was a case knife. I still have it and plan on passing it down to my son when the time is right. I recently started looking into buying new case knives. I found a few and had them shipped to me. I was really disappointed when I compared the new case knives to the old one. I have purchased a variety of different knives from different producers. I can say that the first and finish is a worthy of the price for Case Knives compared to other brands.. I have purchased a few old case lock backs and have decided to take the scales off and replace them with new bone scales. I recently took a shark tooth to a machine shop and had them fix my blade wiggle. It cost me $56.75. Not a bad price considering I put 70 into the knife. Altogether under 130.. From now on I’m not gonna waste my time or money on a new case knife. I have found that purchasing older case knives and having the blade wiggle taken out at the machine shop or putting new scales on is much more efficient. Sure I run the value as far as collecting but at least I have a functional life I am proud to pass down.. I am curious about the new hammerhead because it is at least aluminum. Kind a hard to mess up aluminum. I just hope the blade wiggle problem is fixed. I am kind of scared to get the hammer head and bone.
I just got two new Case knives .
March of 2021 production . And they are impressive . Maybe I just got lucky . But I've got a stockman coming next week . We will see as the proof isn't in the pudding , but is if they can build a stockman with no blade rub .
@@Rancherinaz I will be looking for a new hammerhead soon. I would like to find one in a dark blue or purple something that looks like a great. Perhaps even indigo bone scales. I hear they are releasing some awesome color variations in bone this year.
I wish you still sold knives...the fact you go through and find decent ones to send out is amazing. Just had to return one because the blade centering was literally rubbing the brass liners because it was so uncentered. And a gap.
What ? You mean Slip Joint Guy quit ?
Oh man , say it isn't so .
I remember when i got my hands on my first case knife. It was a Damascus trapper with crimson bone scales. My heart sank when I received it and noticed the bolsters were misaligned and the gap on the backspring is big enough to see daylight through. I had to accept the knife as is because it's still a beautiful knife and I live in the uk so return is out of the question. Will never buy a case again. Have stuck to GEC ever since.
This QC issue has been creeping over many years.im 60. When i was 15 i saved enough to buy a cheetah. The local hardware had them. The first one had pits in the blade. The second one also as well as the third one. Cheetas and Jaguars are premium knives from Case. Yet at 15 i walked away from Case over this issue
I love Case but...but...they have QC problems. I was looking for a doctors knife in Crandall jig bone olive green to complete a set. I looked through 14 knives before I found one acceptable between the gaps and blade wobble. I was thankful for the dealer's patience but wasn't too happy with Case. I've pretty much quit buying Case online. Don't get me starting on the blade grinds.
Seeing as this video is a year old, I’m extremely sad about what case knives has become... and being let down literally hundreds of times. I now only buy case knives from the 70’s and before. As expensive and tedious as it is to find great mint examples from that era, I believe those to be the epitome of case knives. I can say that the knives I’ve sent back to case knives to have issues fixed they have come back flawless, but the hassle of buying, being let down, sending it off for a month or two and coming back to be satisfied. It sucks... just saying it sucks.
Wholeheartedly agree with you.
Man, I’m 60 years old. I’ve owned top of the line Shrade Old Timers, old Case folders, old Camillus knives, passed down from my father that were made in the 50’s and 60’s. Back when every knife we knew was made in America. High-carbon steel that required care to prevent rusting. Nothing you could do about the natural patina that formed over the years, but all great steel was that way. The Old Timers were sharpened at 10 to 15 degrees and absolutely razor sharp. One slip and you were cut. Nothing like this stainless alloy, “super steels” sharpened at this 20 degrees nonsense. The big seller is, “Hey, it doesn’t rust, it’s not like you’re going to use it anyway, and it’s made in China. Doesn’t get scary sharp and it’s cheap. We have thousands of them, get yours now!”
And I remember when real good knives turned into okay knives, then total crap knives. It was when our old carbon steel was too expensive and brittle for the amateurs and nobody really used knives for important things like camping and carving a bear out of a pine burl. They’re all indoors playing video games and don’t even own a bicycle for Christ’s sake, and so of course knives became a novelty item instead of a necessary tool. But all we had is back spring folders and they were meticulously precision made with of course no gaps between the spacers and springs. Kinda sad how Case and Shrade as well, sold out and just got lazy. Lousy stainless blade steel, shoddy workmanship, and just no care. The reason is, the market for old classic remakes is dying off. Old collectors aren’t going to collect crappy copies and new collectors want to collect new knives.
I have some very old classics that can’t be replaced. I also have some very new flippers and frame locks that are way more practical than any two-handed opening pocket knife. And it’s only more practical because I’m not competing with my cousin in carving the better bear. I use my new fancy knives to open envelopes and packages. Cut string sometimes. You don’t need a real knife for that.
Love your channel. Just subscribed. Sorry for the rant from a grouchy old knife guy.
Thank you for your honesty.
I just bought a brand new Case kickstart trapperlock and it has tons of issues with it. The case logo on the handle wasn't glued in or held in in anyway, the jigging on the handles is screwed up and in the space where three jigged spots should be there is only one long jig. The blades edge hadn't been completely sharpened and still had a burr on the edge from grinding the edge onto the blade. There was still polishing rouge inside the handle and the lockup on the blade when opened has probably an 1/8th inch of play front to back and a little side to side. The handles look like they aren't fully shaped yet. It just seems like they accidentally skipped all of the finishing steps except for polishing. I filled out a warranty form so we'll see if they can get me a good knife because there is no fixing this knife with all of the blade play.
I'll never buy a case knife again. Bought a 130$ collector's edition knife for my grandfather as a Christmas gift. It had a quarter inch unpolished finish on the blade with the engraving.. three week response time. Customer service was completely incompetent.
@@J__C__ Yep. The complete incompetence of customer service is whats made me unwilling to do business with them anymore.
And the irony that your calling me a "dumbass like most of the general public". While simultaneously reverting to hurling insults at strangers on the internet, proving yourself to be completely general and common, isn't lost on me. And your logic is also completely and utterly lacking. Is it MY job to keep purchasing products until they can get it right?? Maybe I should just spend another 130$ and keep my fingers crossed this time? #IQunder80
Your damn right I'll stop doing business with a company after one bad interaction. Especially when indeffernce and incompetence is involved.
I'll use a common phrase you can comprehend, " fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me". And, I'M the common dumbass in this conversation? Give me a break.
Go to your local bar and call complete strangers dumbasses internet toughguy.
I’ve Yet to order a case online, or purchase one in store that didn’t have noticeable quality issues. I was told by multiple people that I just need to shell out the money to get a collector quality case because they don’t have those issues. I just spent 90 bucks on a Caribbean blue bone copper lock. There is a gap so big between the bone handle scale and brass liner, that I can see the lockbar pivot between the scale and liner. I still love the knife and the way it looks but man it sucks
Ok, so I have collected Case knives for 20+ years. I had over 100 in my collection. I didn’t like it but I was used to the $hitty quality, the gaps, the lame walk and talk. And then I bought my first Great Eastern Cutlery Knife. I sold 100 Case knives just to buy 25 Great Eastern. Great Eastern knives are without a doubt the finest production knives on the market. I still have a few Case but they are all pre 1980.
Glad to see someone else with the same opinion. I know guys that swear by them. I point out the gaps and bad grinds and all that and get back oh well no one's perfect. Which is true. Some of my GEC knives have small gaps or slightly uneven grinds but those are small cosmetic issues that I have to examine it closely to find. I have seen the same kind of issues as you show here. Yea at half the price I don't expect custom level f&f. Don't send out warped and burnt blades with bowed back spacers and cracked handles though. I can go get a modern locking folder from China now a days that has a tool steel blade with a decent (not great but plenty good enough) heat treat. Ball bearing pivot and amazing finishing and almost no flaws for 50 bucks. The kind of quality I used to spend over $150 to get years ago. I love traditional knives and I would absolutely love to have more than a few companies making good ones. There's a few case knives that would look nice with my Northwoods, GEC, Victorinox collection. Not until they match quality with price though. To me, they just look and feel cheap.
I checked my new Case 6344 Stockman and my new Old Timer 330T and neither one of them had a gap.
Just bought a Vintage Bone Sway Back at the Case/Zippo store in Bradford. When I took it out the box to look at it, one of the pins fell out. I filed an on-line warranty claim. We shall see how it’s handled...
😮
@@Rancherinaz Case honored its warranty and fixed the knife. Got it back in about 3 weeks and have been carrying it ever since.
I have russlock clip point and it's got gaps and blade play in all directions. That being said, I still like the purchase because I love the russlock design but I have been meaning to send it back in.
I don't buy new case knives anymore.
I look for older ones in pawnshops.
Do you mess with the kissing Kranes now that they are imports? Pretty good quality
I go to a local shop to check each one and often leave empty handed because of this crap, and often I could pull the blade out by hand it's so loose
Wonder if temperature change could be causing separation during shipping etc?
I doubt it. Between handle material, maybe, but that's but that's not the case. It's always between the brass and the back spring. I think it would take a very great temp change to cause all that flex/gap.
No, if it says CaseXX on it. It should be perfection!
You said at the end of the video that all slipjoints have some gap. I have a James Brand The County Knife (made in China) and its fit and finish is perfect. How does this happen??? Yet, 2/3 of my Case were sent back due to problems. I guess it is a matter of volume produced and the bean counters at Case have a say.
Sounds like Case has a real issue with consistent QC, I have been happy with all the knives I have received from you and appreciate your caring enough to do secondary inspection, to bad Case doesn't care more. I have already heard the same thing about QC issues from other folks regarding Case so it seems the word is out whether it is justified or not, dissatisfied people do talk, are you listening Case?
Gap A and B I'd live with but C is no good. I got a barlow from you, beautiful fit and finish but pretty dull, wouldn't cut paper. Easily remedied (20 minutes on some stones and strop) but definitely a QC issue. I've seen the same issues with other brands that mass produce. These issues seem to come in waves.
Has Case stepped it up in any way since this? I just ordered a mini trapper and am expecting the worst
Probably not. They literally don’t care. But they do make good knives too. So hope the best for you! Just don’t expect GEC level quality
I buy several Case knives a year. Mostly trappers & stockman. Have had one with a weak back spring. A few with blade play. Blade play seems more common in the stockman. Overall I’ve been pleased with fit & finish. I probably have 50 plus from 70’s 10 dot to present. Knives in video should have definitely had better QC. Also have had several Benchmade with blade play from factory. If you
pay that much for USA made knives. You expect a closer inspection prior to shipping.
Hey man. Love your videos, and I'm glad to see someone calling out case, that said, I'm really interested in the brown bone Barlow. I was wondering if there was any way you could procure one. I've had a difficult time finding one. I'd really appreciate it. Thanks.
Ethan McCall sorry I’m out and have been told they will no longer get them. So if you can find one buy it!
Very informative video re: what to look for & expect in quality pocket knives. I Liked & subscribed.
I was going to order a Case knife online and now I'm thinking no.
I just returned a Rough Ryder rr304, large sod buster($16.89), the blade was so far off center that the liner was scratching the blade. Not worth keeping at any price. Recently bought an Eafengrow, ball bearing flipper with nearly a 4" blade, for $17. And its seriously good. And I believe a dud is rare. I wonder why Case cant make it happen anymore?
Glad I have seen this I have a collection of Rough Rider knives but thought I would like one quality knife and Case sprang to mind, now quite dubious. What do you think of buck 110 ? Would you call that a quality knife?
Graham Parr buck makes very good knives. Just make sure it’s made in the US. The 110 is a great knife.
I have a Frost elephant toenail that is perfect in every way. Much much better than what you're showing. Two Marble knives also beautiful and perfect better that the Case knives you're featuring
I only have two Case knives. A trapper and a stockman. The stockman had to be returned because it developed a serious backspring problem. The replacement, after a year, now has a weak backspring. It cost me $78 delivered. Not a vast sum in the knife collecting year but one would expect a knife of reasonable quality for that amount. I shan't buy another Case knife.
Yeah, I've been noticing more and more issues with Case knives lately. Those gaps are pretty awful. I recently purchased the sawcut brown bone Barlow in CV and one side was COMPLETELY SMOOTH!! No sawcut to it at all. Plus the walk and talk is kinda weak on the main blade. I was disappointed, but decided to keep it as an everyday user. I guess I should have sent it to them for a warranty repair, but I've heard some horror stories about knives coming back worse than when they were sent in to them. I don't think it was worth the $65 I paid for it... I buy a lot of knives and I've noticed Case has been struggling with their QC. I hope it improves soon... if not, I'll probably just stick with GEC going forward. Thanks for the honest rant.
- Jim
BCV Piper I’ve seen those issues too. There is more and more I haven’t mentioned. I’m about to make a log book of crazy crap I see come out of case lol
Just bought a new Case Tony Bose Panama. Gaps weren’t the only thing wrong. The main blade wobbled back and forth when open. Secondary blade would rub liner so bad when closing you had to push it in. Walk and talk? 🤣 NO😑 returned very next day!
Case is a joke. So sad.
Bought two of the 2021 peachseed amber copperheads. BOTH had almost no snap. Springs like butter. I don't collect these things. I use them. But I won't use one that will close on my hand. Here's a little story for you. These are the same issues Queen Cutlery had. Now the Chinese make them...
I have a Chinese made Browning gunstock. It's superbly made. Cost? Less than 10 bucks at the time. Case better wake up.
I just recieve two Case knives from SMKW and they are both really nice . Beyond expectation . One is a crimson peach seed trapper and the other is a rough Delrin sod buster jr .
I've got a medium stockman coming from Keystone knives this week . I'm hoping I'm just as satisfied there . The proof will be in the stockman .
I really appreciate your content. I've always been a case fan due to being from PA. However after watching your videos I went against getting a bose stockman and got an otter messer anchor instead. Hopefully they fix their issues. Very sad
Have they got any better from when this vid was made ?
Nope
@@slipjointguy Thanks for replying 19min 40 secs into the vid 😃 pity as the purple one looks good iv been thinking of buying one but now im thinking twice .
@@duncan7153 if you buy one. Look at it, and inspect it in person. Save you the trouble of shipping it back. 👍🏻👍🏻
@@slipjointguyI'm from Scotland the nearest place too purchase is the country of Wales so mail order only but great company they are HH nvr had a prob but if i did theyd sure deal with it glad came across your vids as i was led to believe case were the better brand .
Hi . I’ve just found this channel and it’s great to see an honest review of the dropping standards on case . I’m actually looking to buy a black canvas case hawkbill but they aren’t available in the uk in black micarta .
I’m happy to purchase from the US bug I don’t want to play Russian roulette with quality issues . Could you help ?
Case xx is the best ever!!!!!
The gaps that you pointed out are not acceptable, in a Case knife selling for $60 - $80, but I probably wouldn't complain if the same gaps were noticed in a Rough Rider. The gaps scare me because I anticipate future blade wobble developing. In a Rough Rider costing $20.00, the option of replacing the knife a couple of years down the road is not economically difficult. But with the Case, if wobble developed a few years after purchase and I had not returned the knife at time of purchase...I would feel like an idiot. In other words , my fault for not taking Case to point at purchase.
Both companies have "forever" warranties, but I expect better from a $80 knife than I do from a $20 knife. And the gaps that you indicated on those Case knives...not acceptable!
I agree with JerseyKnife Guy...maybe all Case knives should be handled before purchase...a sad state of affairs.
Personally I'm tending towards Rough Rider more and more, though I've only had one Case that should never have left the factory. But if you sold those Case knives to me...I would be disappointed, and maybe I would stop doing business with you.
ive bought 5 case knives, four went into the trash and 1 (OUT OF FIVE!!!!!!) was okay. I remember being so excited for a yellow delrin trapper and spent my hard earned money on it and it was ABSOLUTE CRAP! Ive also had 1 with burned edges too.
Call them and complain. That’s the only way they’ll care
Wow ! Just wow !
That's terrible .
I just got two brand new 3/2021 Case knives . They are truly impressive . Zero gaps . Fit and finish is perfect although bled alignment isn't absolutely perfect but still easily well within being acceptable .
If I get it for actually using and carrying it doesn't bother me, if it's for collecting and I paid more than $50 it would bother me. I usually buy them from true value hardware or the farm store so I can hand select. It'd be cool if they had a grading system and then collectors could get the perfect knives and people who use them for edc can buy the lower grades or "seconds".
A gap wouldn't bother me for EDC knives, but lack of snap or blades rubbing against liners actually effects the usability of the knife. Weak Snap is very unacceptable for me because thats a safety flaw
Gaps as wide as a business card ?!?!!
Seriously ?
For him to even admit that is shamefull . The biggest gap on any of the dozen or so Rough Riders I own is hard to maybe get a sliver of notebook paper into .
But in all fairness , I just recieved two brand new offerings from Case that were both produced in March of 2021 and they are impressive . I mean I'm really impressed . The only thing that is lacking is that blade centering isn't perfect . It's well within acceptable and no blade comes close to a liner but they are dead center . I've got another coming next week and it's a stockman , so we will see if we get the same fit and finish as well as if the thing will have zero blade rub as all my USA Old Timers and Uncle Henry's possess .
I live in Europe, so Case knives are neither common nor being propelled by nostalgia here. I have only handled 2 Case knives. First one ever was Case/Bose collaboration Coffin Jack, that I bought as a middleman for a friend. It had beautiful jigging, but it had noticeable blade play on the main blade! Much bigger than on my RR Trapper. Sure it was pre-owned and used, but still it appeared to be out of place on a 'premium' knife like that.
Second one is my very first own Case - Swayback Gent. I explained the seller that it is going to be my very first Case and that I really want to like the brand; that the knife would be forwarded to me to Europe and that my ability to return the knife will be very limited. So I asked to pick me a nice one... And... it is amazing? No gaps, spot on centering, polished, unbelievable jigging and dye job. It snaps, but walk an talk is a bit lazy, but I consider it to be a trade-off for having the spring flush in all three positions. Yes, shield could be more sunken and the grind more even towards the tip, but even being a GEC fanboy I have to say this Case can take on any GEC I ever handled especially in terms of jigging and dye. But again I have heard a fellow knife enthusiast complaining about burnt tip.
I've got $5 to $10 Sanrenmu slipjoints that are absolutely perfect. Flawless fit and finish. So in my opinion this is unacceptable from Case at that price point. Mind you, $50 is not cheap. It may be cheaper than GEC knives but it's not cheap. Gaps and blade play are totally unnecessary in this modern era.
Ron Broeders hmmm...that may be the case, no pun intended, however...your Sanrenmu knives aren’t Case knives. The collectibility factor with Case’s product eclipses their quality, for better or worse. People just like the fact they are traditional and American and are available in so many pretty colors lol...most of the fancy handled knives are going right into the safe these days. The less expensive and even more roughly finished delrin handled knives you see on the end caps at Home Depot and Ace Hardware are the probably the small majority of Case knives sold today that actually get used, I.e taken out of box, box tossed away, sharpened up and banging around in a tool box for the next 10-20 years. I personally carry vintage IXL, Case and Buck penknives and have done so for the last 20 years. Some of my everyday knives have included: a heavily sharpened Case tested 3347 I bought from Jerry Skelton in the early 90’s (gave it to my grandad), an old Case tested whittler with worn down blades (but what was left was great, sharp steel), a 70’s Buck 309 with handmade copper handled and a 1900 era IXL 3” penknife with ivory celluloid handles. All of these knives, well the Case and the IXL anyway have way better blade grinds and steel than modern Case factory knives. I probably paid less than $40 each for the knives I’ve just described. If you really want a good honest carrying knife, buy a slightly worn down Case 70’s carbon steel stock pattern or two blade jack or penknife. You can still buy them, rust, paint spots and all, on eBay for less that $40 if you get lucky. You might need to spend sometime cleaning it or tuning up the blade action with a ball pein hammer. Sharpen it up and go over it with some steel wool and you will have a good knife with character that was meant to be used from the beginning, that will last the rest of your life if you’re careful with it. The modern Case factory items in the $60-70+ retail price range are like Hummel figurines or collectible spoons from tourist locations. Sure they can be used, but that’s not why people are buying them today. By the 80’s Case and many other makers were aware of this fact and started doing all the cute “series” knives and all that. As interesting as some of the Case 80’s knives were, you could see the fit and finish and attention to detail slipping away. I have had the privilege of comparing several models against one another and sadly I think the 80’s was Case’s low point. I had a beautiful XX M279 and I’ve compared it to a 70’s, 80’s and modern version of the same pattern. The XX era knife is so smooth and well fitted, excellent blade grinds and finish. Nice snap and action 70+ years later. The 80’s knife looked like it was made by a big machine with poor tolerances, visible grind lines, rough edges, spacers (vs careful grinding) to get the blades to fit the recesses, etc. Literally no comparisons! And while the fancy higher end retail Case knives of today might be a good business model (make people want to just keep buying them) but that model is not with the serious user in mind. It is what it is guys! Those who have ears to hear let them hear! Lol
I just got an $85 bone stag barlow, and you can put a credit card in the gap between bolster and scale on the shield side
Jacob Norman it’s sad man. Case “quality”
And people get so pissed at me for telling them their favorite brand is ripping them off.
Return that knife if you can.
@@slipjointguy I was going to, but they are out of them, It's a user knife, so not the end of the world, but I live on SS disability, and hate wasting money for less than china made quality. Case customers are paying for a Ford truck and getting go carts, damned shame, I've carried Case for 40 years and never been this disappointed in a US company
Jacob Norman best thing to do is call case and complain and demand them to fix it at their cost. Don’t pay shipping. If they tell you they won’t pay shipping, tell them you’ll go on their Facebook and leave a negative review with pictures. Then they will bend over backwards for you.
You know case makes the Tony Bose series knives that are top quality however they run 150 plus
Jason Wainwright tribal lock you can get brand new for 70$ I carry mine everyday all day it’s a beast of a knife
Don't slip out of joint, mate!
Would like case to produce more cv but they have changed it to cs .I guess it's kind of the same thing.But I would take any bad knife with a gap as long as the snap is there and the blade doesn't wiggle but it would have to be half price
I bought a couple Case Trappers locally where I live, and both of them the spey blades were "spongy." So I asked the salesperson if I could look at the rest of them to find one that I liked. Every single one of the Trappers had spongy, spey blades that went back too far. Every one. I've been to other stores and the spey blades were fine. It's hit or miss. Buyer beware.
I just got a new Case trapper .
March 2021 production . The thing is totally impressive . Maybe they are getting serious again . Maybe I just got lucky ?
i would let it slide for an inexpensive RR. but i won't pay that much for a traditional, so i don't have an Case or GEC etc
What’s your website? And can you review a Case kickstart trapper?
stageprojrc I reviewed the kickstart series. It’s a older video. Website is slipjointguy.com
Thanks for watching
I collect knifes. I believe most manufacturers get it. Fit and finish is mandatory. If it isn’t , your done.
I have a case Trapper that does the same thing and the back spring put grooves in the Tang of the blade and the walk and talk is terrible. It's like dragging a piano down a gravel driveway.