I live in that oh so knife restrictive of lands known as the uk. I'm not allowed anything that locks or is longer than 3". So my criteria gets a little awkward.
1) UK Street Legal?
2) Value (am I getting my money's worth?)
3) Can I use it and what for? (inc. comfort in the hand and pocket)
4) Style
5) Weight
Does anyone else think UK knife laws are too restrictive?
All of the Coldsteel and Benchmade knives I've ever seen have failed criteria #3 miserably :P
I usually consider out-of-the-box sharpness to be a bonus, not a selling point. I have yet to find a knife that meets my sharpness standard out of the box.
Ease of sharpening (especially the blade shape, blade steel, etc.) is probably one of the biggest issues I look at before buying a knife - if the blade has a ridiculous shape, it's probably not going to be easy to sharpen...
I live in that oh so knife restrictive of lands known as the uk. I'm not allowed anything that locks or is longer than 3". So my criteria gets a little awkward.
1) UK Street Legal?
2) Value (am I getting my money's worth?)
3) Can I use it and what for? (inc. comfort in the hand and pocket)
4) Style
5) Weight
Does anyone else think UK knife laws are too restrictive?
ArgentSanguine 11 months ago
@ArgentSanguine Very good criteria.
CreativeOutletHobbie 11 months ago
how do you center a automatic knife's blade because my benchmade out of the box wasn't completely centered
TH3aznEmperor 1 year ago
1. Value (price vs what you get)
2. Versatility (unless buying for a specific use)
3. Blade steel
4.Aesthetics (Even if it's a sebenza for $100, I will not accept pink)
5. Lock type (I prefer not having a lockback unless I really like everything else)
6. Blade play
7. Handle material (put higher if material is uncomfortable)
8. Weight (anything under 6 oz unless worth it)
9. Blade centering (unless it's very off)
10. Blade shape (no serrations unless fully serrated for a certain purpose)
Hitari0 2 years ago
Great points! Going to watch PART 2, Now.
thecajunblaze 2 years ago
All of the Coldsteel and Benchmade knives I've ever seen have failed criteria #3 miserably :P
I usually consider out-of-the-box sharpness to be a bonus, not a selling point. I have yet to find a knife that meets my sharpness standard out of the box.
Ease of sharpening (especially the blade shape, blade steel, etc.) is probably one of the biggest issues I look at before buying a knife - if the blade has a ridiculous shape, it's probably not going to be easy to sharpen...
Just my 2 cents!
DoritoMonk 2 years ago
My spyderco was very sharp and shiny out of the box.
Hitari0 2 years ago
1.price
2. steel
3. blade shape
4.lock
5.weight
loismustdie7890 2 years ago
yep price is an important one I didn't mention.
CreativeOutletHobbie 2 years ago
yeah ive had sharpness problems with my benchmade 940
sirarrowmen 2 years ago
i also consider the company's warranty.
gundude73 2 years ago