28 February

EDC for the OAG

 

Photo by John Vachon, Library of Congress

So, EDC stands for “Everyday Carry,” it’s a formalized term for the stuff men have been carrying in their pockets for the past 300 years. Did it need a name? Probably not, but it’s a hobby now, so it’s gotten a name. OAG stands for “Ordinary Average Guy”, a phrase made popular by Joe Walsh, God bless him. The question is: Do OAG’s need an EDC? I am now, and have always been, an ordinary average guy, so let’s see.

Most EDC kits are centered around a pocketknife. Do you need a special knife for this? No. You know that Pakistani Buck Knife clone you’ve got in your pocket, the one you traded a kid for your Stretch Armstrong in the 3rd grade? Yeah, that will do fine. I know, the guy at work next to you has a two hundred dollar knife from a company you’ve never heard of, made from a steel you’ve never heard of, and says you need one too. You don’t. If that Buckastani does what you need it to do, save your money. That guy next to you is a knife enthusiast and that’s fine too, he just gets a little carried away. No matter how old we get, we’ll never get over Show and Tell.

How about a first aid kit? Keep one at home, one in the car, and they probably already have one at work, so you don’t need to carry one around.

How about paracord?  I have no idea how this could be useful. Once I used some twine to make a leash for a stray dog I took home. It turned out he was happy to follow me anywhere, leashed or not.

Multitool? If your life is plier-centric I say “yes, absolutely.” My boss loves to say “get the best cheapest,” sound advice. It seems like there’s two kinds of men in this world: pliers or knife. (I’m a knife guy, but I admire multitools. So far, I have only been able to justify a Gerber Dime.)

And all the rest: mosquito netting, flint & steel, sandpaper, sharpener, ipecac, oil of squibb, camp saws, flare gun, whatever, it’s all the same, if you need it fine, if you don’t, leave it home.

Sometimes you may need to carry some special, though temporary, EDC gear and that can be interesting. Once, while visiting a third world country, way out in the middle of nowhere, an odd item helped me. My hammock failed and I used unwaxed dental floss to sew it back up. The only reason I had floss is because a friend told me, years before, that every camper should carry some. Go figure.

What if I want to upgrade my EDC? Yes, that’s great. I have a bunch of knives etc., some of them a little pricey, they make me happy. I’m just saying that nobody should feel it’s mandatory.

Buckastani Uber Alles!

Photo by Marion S. Trikosko, Library of Congress


27 February

Roper is Worth a Look

 

Photo by A G Russell Knives

               Roper Knives make some interesting traditional folders. The models are the usual suspects: trapper, stockman, and the like. They are moderately priced and made in China, nothing too exciting there. Where Roper shines is in its handle designs. While not a radical diversion, they do represent a welcome departure from other knife companies’ offerings. Typical is the one pictured above using two varieties of micarta. They also make a Viper Series, one of which is bumpy and one of which is inverted bumpy. The designs are inspired by the Old West/Southwest and also feature a series of Native American motifs. They all get pretty good reviews and sell in the 20+ dollar range. They offer a line of modern and sheath knives, neither of which I can speak to with any authority.

               Roper also makes some fusion knives, combining modern features with traditional looks. One, the Pecos Linerlock (RP0011), sports a creamy yellow Delrin handle with a copperhead top bolster and a powder horn bottom. Looking every bit the traditional, a closer look reveals a thumb stud and a pocket clip. The steel is 1065 carbon. The blade is a practical clip point. They claim a 3.5” blade, but personally I think of it as 3” with a 2 3/4” cutting edge. The thumb stud is not accompanied by bearings but can be easily opened entirely with a fluid motion of the thumb. The linerlock is easily disengaged.

               Those are the facts, but on the subjective side I can proclaim this as one of the two most companionable knives I own. I’m not entirely sure what I mean by that, but it’s what comes to mind when carrying this knife. It looks great, is easy to open and close, and it cuts stuff.

               The other fusion knives by Roper are the Buffalo Warrior and Buffalo Scout, which I do not own. They are both traditional looking flippers with wood scales and brass bolsters. I see one in my future.  Anyway, look ‘em up and see what you think.

Roper Pecos Linerlock
Photo by Walmart

26 February

"5 Pocket Knives I'd Buy First if I Had to Start Over" - in America!

 

Ute knife baabee! Ute knife, baby ute knife...
(Wikipedia)

So I was watching Slipjoint Sawyer on the YouTube and it was pretty good, as is all his stuff. But this one was problematic as he’s in England, so his list may be a little different if he was in the U.S. of A. So here’s my version of Mr. Sawyer’s starting over list.

               First off, America is pretty much a sink or swim state, so if you're down, well good luck buddy. Let’s say your apartment building burnt down and you didn’t have insurance. Or you wife got sick and you had lousy insurance. Or your wife got better and ran off with her lawyer who got her everything. Everything? Even my knife collection? Yup, everything. 

And while all this was going on at home that pretty good job you had disappeared when your company moved to Upper Volta, and you won’t get any unemployment because you’re a dirty Democrat, or even worse, a cat eating Britisher! So you need a job and you need it fast and you take the first thing you can get, and it’s minimum wage, federal minimum wage, $7.25 an hour and you want to buy some knives (for comparisons sake a big mac combo in America runs between $8 and $13  nationally). Here’s what you do.

               Your first paycheck: “Hyper Tough Retractable Utility Knife with Blade Storage, Model 6832, 7.75 in” $3.92 from Walmart. It even comes with 3 disposable blades, because all the best blades are disposable.

               Your second paycheck: Well you're really cooking with gas now, you got a fiver to spend! How about the Rough Ryder Yellow Mini Trapper Folding Knife at $4.99? It’s almost a real big boy knife!

Your third paycheck: Wow only six weeks in and you got a sawbuck left over, good job! Splurge on a “Frost Cutlery Black Hills Steel Dakota Blue Bone Peanut Folding Knife” for only $9.99. What, you don’t have anything for taxes and shipping? Well. You’ll get another paycheck in a mere two weeks. Hang in there.

Your fifth paycheck: Hey, you got raise after they found your shift leader hanging in the break room, now you’re the shift leader! Yay! It’s 20 more bucks a week and it’s off to Roper town, no pun intended. The “Roper Liner Lock Pecos Delrin Knife” is a nice midsize old timey looking knife with some modern touches. The 1065 steel blade and yellowish Delrin handles are making you feel like a human again! It’s pricy, like 20 bucks, but you’ve earned it.

Your sixth paycheck: That $7.75 an hour just keeps gushing in and you want something swanky. How about a Marble's Exhibition Grade Brown Checkered Bone Barlow” At only $17.99 this stylin beauty will make you look like a ten dollar an hour man. The sky’s the limit! Now go buy a shovel because you still got a lot of digging to do. 



23 February

Bear & Son Peanut Butter & Jelly Lockback (PBJ05)

 


I received this knife as a Valentines Day present. It was a real surprise. I asked my girlfriend, “Did I tell you about this knife?” “No,” she said. “How did you decide on this knife?” She said, “I went on that site you like, and it was on the home page and I know how much you like peanut butter.” Which is true: pb&j, pb&b, pb&h, pb&p, it’s all good.

As far as I know, Case was the first to make a pb&j themed knife, though it’s limited to the color scheme, still, it always brings a smile. Bear & Son has gone it one better by making scales that actually look like peanut butter and jelly. My girlfriend says it looks just like Jiff, though I think it’s more like Peter Pan. That’s in low light, turn up the light and you get sparkles coming from the “mica pearl,” something I had to look up.

Knifewise, the series comes in a Barlow, two sizes of trapper, a fixed blade, and if you like peanut butter and booze, a beer tender. The series is a collaboration between Bear & Son, Smokey Mountain Knife Works, and custom knife designer/maker Michael Prader. The Lockback, is typical of its type (they are all cousins of the Buck 110), and features a “high carbon stainless blade.” I find the lock to be a bit tough to use, but I have found most lockbacks to be stubborn. The key is to press on the lock lever with your thumb and thumbnail at the same time, going as far down as it will go, which works great. It’s not something you’ll want to do 30 times a day but is fine for casual use. 

Though heavy on novelty value, the lockback version is close enough to a gentleman’s knife to go in the pocket of my sportscoat. The blade came sharp enough for me, but the pivot needed a little oil, and I threw some on the springs and the lock lever, more for good luck than anything else. (I use Hoppe's Number 9 Gun Oil on my knives and you’ll never talk me out of it.)

So there you have it, a good knife with whimsical scales, win win.

19 February

Rosecraft Modern Knives "Priced to Move."


Remember when Fred fell in with those bank robbers and one guy had a switchblade that opened into a full-sized meat clever? That's what the Ogee reminds me of.

Rosecraft Blades has “decided to move away from Modern Knives altogether.” This is news to me, though it seems to have been going on for a while, but it was news to me, maybe you too. There are still a good number left, and the discounts are good. I picked up an Ogee because it reminds me of an episode of the Flintstone’s.

My other Rosecraft modern model is the Castorea, which is, for all intents and purposes, a modern grandaddy Barlow. The name is interesting, some sites say castorea means “beaver,” and other sites say it’s a beaver’s scent gland. The blade does resemble a beaver’s tail. I don’t know what a beaver’s scent gland looks like.

Anway, if you like quality modern knives, or are just modern-curious, there’s plenty of bargains there.

"No, you cannot see my castorea!"

Gzen92CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons



17 February

Edge Retention Tests

 

Yeah, but is it sharp?

I enjoy watching knife sharpness tests. They aren’t the most exciting things in the world, watching somebody make hundreds of cuts, but they have taught me a few things. If you aren’t familiar with these tests, they go as follows: The tester will take one or more knives and see how many cuts can be made before the knife gets too dull to easily slice a piece of paper. The testing material is usually corrugated cardboard or rope.

The first one that caught my eye was done by Paddy’s Potato Peelers, who wanted to see how many cuts he could get out of a Rough Ryder trapper. The steel is 440a and the knife inexpensive, nothing fancy. He got a hundred cuts before the blade went dull. I was impressed. Other testers have achieved similar results with the old RR brand.

Then I ran across a fellow named Cedric* who tested a bunch of different knives, starting with some basic steels all the way up to some fancier varieties. There are knives out there that can make, not a hundred, but hundreds of cuts before getting dull. 

I was also impressed with the method the testers came up with. This informal group of vloggers have achieved a pretty good system for tests that is objective and easily replicated. If you are skeptical, you can easily do the test yourself at home spending little to no money.

Lessons learned:

  1. There are budget knives that can cut a lot of stuff before getting dull. This is, of course, relative to the materials being cut.
  2. It seems that I can use my knives longer between sharpening than I thought.
  3. There is a real value in premium knife steel, especially if you need to do a lot of cutting throughout your day.

 It seems rare to find testing that reveals all good news, but there you have it. 

*It seems Cedric may be his dog's name?

11 February

The Swiss Army Knife is a Good Friend to the Retiree

 

The Swiss Explorer from Victorinox, as they used to say
over at The Whole Earth Catalog "Tools for Living."

One of the nice little surprises to getting older is how much I still rely on my old friend the Swiss Army Knife (SAK). I used to backpack, camp, fish, and work in all sorts of factories, warehouses, construction sites, and other places where a good multitool can be essential, but not anymore, and yet, there is still a Victorinox Explorer SAK in my pocket and not just for sentimental reasons. I use it all the time, sometimes for the same old tasks, like tightening screws and opening bottles, but others too, like cutting open annoying clamshell packaging with the scissors and reading the very small print on items at the store with the magnifying glass. Some of the most important words you will ever read are on the sides of medicine bottles, but who can see them?!

Victorinox scissors are widely acknowledged for punching above their weight, and those tiny things can cut open most anything a bigger pair can handle. The magnifying glass, peculiar to only a few Swiss models, is a less well-known Godsend. If there was a Noble Prize for usefulness, Victorinox would win, hands down. Even the tools that seem superfluous pop up to save the day. Few people think of the awl as useful, until they need to add a notch to their belts. The parcel hook, the pin, the toothpick, the tweezers, and the corkscrew have all served me in times of need. Who wants to stare at an unopened bottle of wine all evening? Who wants to keep that splinter in their finger? Who wants those strings digging into their hands?

The newest tool for the Swiss Army Knife is the internet, where there are countless numbers of sites and videos written by clever people to show you all the things you can use your SAK for. I will mention two. First is a fellow, named Felix Immler, who spends a lot of his free time thinking of new uses for the SAK. He plays The Professor to the world’s Gilligan’s Island. Another good destination is a video by VineClimber called Good Night, Swiss Army Knife, where she spends a pleasant hour going over the pros and cons of the various SAKs in her collection. Oh, and Jon Gadget, I guess that’s three. Anyway, there are a lot of good people in this world, some of whom want you to get the most out of your tools, God Bless ‘em.

While the SAK is naturally at home to the handymen and MacGyver’s of the world, it’s much more useful to the unhandy. If your tool collection consists of a screwdriver and a bent steak knife, buy yourself a SAK. If you are always misplacing your tools, buy a Sak and keep in a safe place, like your pocket or a kitchen drawer. If your tired of buying tools for every little problem, buy yourself a SAK, the fifty-some bucks for the Explorer will save you money in the long run, or, if you want to go whole hog, spend a C-note on the Swiss Champ, a veritable toolbox of a knife. I can’t recommend them enough. And please, get the name brand, it will never let you down. If cost is an issue, check your local pawnshop or thrift store.

Maybe you got your first scout knife when you were eight years old, now, at 65, it’s time for your first Swiss Army Knife. Congratulations.

The Swiss Champ, a little large but surprisingly practical.