holy s*** I'm nervous then I'm scared a little bit angry but at the same time so happy with an ending I hope for but wasn't sure would happened in 51 seconds with no dialogue good s*** man
For that reason I have a Manix 2 and a Paramilitary 2 with that steel, maybe the stainless with the best edge retention and not so brittle as people say (if you do only what you can do with a pocket knife).
Heard about your channel a while back, are you one of the few deals with 110, may I ask what you use, nothing to prove, these days, wore all my stuff out ages ago, crazy huh.
wow... didn't expected that! From now on I will consider myself lucky that I went for the s110v para2 instead of the s30v model xD did you noticed some form of small chipping and does it have a convex edge or a straight one like you get from KMEs and edge pros?
check out Joe X, he is a youtuber and he is REALLY abusing blades so you see what happens to your blade. In this test here, cutting one copper coin doesn't say much about the quality of the edge - your own knife might perform differently.
@@diekritischestimmeMy guy, ain't NOBODY doing the tests JoeX is doing to their FOLDING KNIVES! That's just silly. They're knives, not wrecking bars. This test was actually a very good one in that it shows that although S110 has a reputation of having a brittle edge, it held up fine in this strenuous test and it still cleanly sliced paper afterward. It shows it won't crumble or suffer a blowout if you hit a staple in a cardboard box or similar. Nobody needs to beat their knife silly to "see what it'll do". We all know what it'll do! It'll break! That's why nobody does that with their folding knives. Because it's stupid unless your sole purpose is entertainment and views which is exactly the point of JoeX's channel.
@@topfueljunkie100On Knife Steel Nerds s110 has a toughness of 3 on their chart. S30 has a toughness of 4 and nobody really complains about how brittle s30 is. Seems like people just “heard” s110 is super fragile and they repeat it without having actually used s110 for themselves as a practical EDC knife (not a car hood annihilator knife).
butch thompson haha I think all I am trying to say is that S110v doesn't need to be babied. I think guys are afraid to rely use it or buy it out of fear of chipping but it's a little tougher then we give it credit. but no, it's not the toughest steel hahaha so be judicious
I have a Lansky system but with diamond rods, not stone. It works very well with my pair of CPM S110V blades and others hard like ZDP-189, K390 and Maxament.
You should’ve kept it. It’s slow but better than the Lansky and better than most other options for a uniform back bevel. The diamond stones are a must for the sharpmaker. You can’t do the back bevel without them and that’s the key to a high performance edge that’s easy to resharpen. I used one exclusively for several years. I do most of my work on a wicked edge 130 now but still use the sharpmaker for touch ups.
Thank you my brother I bought 2 Spyderco ....crazy man it is an addiction .... f... I can not escape ... but I will not buy anymore... otherwise there will be no stopping ... I will swim in knives lol@David Martin Portmann
to be honest I wanted to buy now CIVIVI man such a cool design on the PRAXIS are you kidding me?? Really cool , not so cool steel but the blade man.... something else!!@David Martin Portmann
there must be significant variance in these spiderco s110v blades. my pm2 s110v chips extremely easily. im running a 18 degree edge on both sides polished to a shaving sharp mirror finish and it will chip in 1-2 spots within 10 feet of cardboard cutting. the first few times this has happened i assumed i just bumped something (like a staple) but the last 3 times it's chipped i've been extremely cautious and documented chipping.. :(
The knife in this video was probably around 40-45° inclusive. And look at 0:36 ... I almost ☠️ the first time I saw it. The knife is obviously just sharp enough to slice the paper clean and nothing more. The geometry is the primary mechanism here.
@ABL Wrong, I know Shawn and have conversed with him several times over the years concerning sharpening and performance. I often come back to this video simply because it's so good. What IS clear is that you have no idea what is going on, lol. This knife has geometry that lends itself to strength. I suspect a flat bevel just thin enough to slice paper myself. Impressive nonetheless. But yeah, good job clowning yourself 🤣
@@oceanwaves83What is it at the 36 second mark you're pointing us to? He's showing the split penny but nothing shocking jumped out. What did you see? Also, you bring up a good point about this video, it lacks important details. We have no idea what edge angle is used so we can't really deduce much useful information from it. If it's 15° per side, that's impressive, if it's 25° per side however, not so much. So your point is well made. Geometry is everything. If it's obtuse then of course this will hold up to such use. No surprise there. This video needs more context and details.
@topfueljunkie100 it was the sharpness test of sawing against his fingers. I actually suspect a flat/blunt bevel that is just thin enough for the paper test. He was proving a point with this video. Edit: just realized I repeated a sentence from months ago. Lol, my guess hasn't changed.
Maybe this will stop all the armchair warriors who say it chips while cutting.... My 110v busts zip ties and all with no issues.... So idk what theyre talking about
Why you stopped at the half way when you were cutting the paper? It seems that the part of the edge which cut the coin did not even touch the paper. 有趣的视频,这位老哥在背敲完那个硬币后削纸,然后削纸到一半就视频就结束了。刀刃和硬币接触的地方根本就没有碰到纸。