👍 Really enjoy videos were people use knives as they were intended to be used (for cutting & slicing) and not wasting time using them to imitate axes, saws, or crow bars. Thank you for sharing.
@@wyomingwright awesome and yet typical of the buck lineage ! My 110 folder was a gift from my grandfather and it has always been my "grail" knife the 110 auto looks pretty sweet too
You can't hammer in a nail. You can't screw in screws. You can't clean the snow off your car. You can't vacuum your carpets. You can't call someone with it. You can't pick your nose. You can't wipe your butt. You can't marry it. You can't put it in your CD player. You can't eat it for breakfast. You can't have it walk your dog. You can't tell the time with it. You can't ask it for directions. You can't have it teach you to ski. You can't freeze ice cubes with it. You can't send it an e-mail. You can't fight off a cold with it. You can't teach it new tricks. You can't fly it like a kite. You can't clean your toilet with it. You can't air fry with it. You can't carry it on an airplane. You can't brush your teeth with it. You can't predict the weather with it. You can't have one in prison. You can't scramble eggs with it. You can't wash your hair with it. You can't give one to toddlers. You can't have it babysit your kids. You can't have it to remote start your car. You can't use it to get yourself a Valentine's day sweety. You can't file your taxes with it. You can't open a checking account with it. You can't change a diaper with it. You can never get back the time you spent reading my comment.
Me too. Feel like I'm watching a video of myself. Add in cutting feed bags, hay baling string, the loose ends of cable ties, heavy duct tape, etc. And making little pilot holes for screwing an eyelet into a fencepost.
Love it. Short, but love the awesomeness of the Buck 110. I'm carrying a 1980-81 three dot with 440C and I'll never get rid of it. Got a custom leather friction sheath from a leather shop in Montana. I replaced all of my newer super steel knives with the 110. Cheers from Idaho!
The Buck 110 is a classic! I don't EDC mine because it's a bit heavy and when its in the sheath on my hip it digs into my love handles. Still love it though!
This was satisfying just to watch lol. I just bought a Hunter 110 and love it! Looking forward to many many years out of it. What is the sheath at the end?
Ok boys and girls here is why most all of us carried a two bladed Buck knife in a scabbard, in the Navy on a Destroyer. They came from our ship’s store by the bye. The larger blade was all purpose. Used to scrape paint, skin potato's and so on. The smaller blade was razor sharp and reserved for emergencies. Like to cut yourself or a shipmate free of a line that went through a pulley.
lockbacks will develop play if you open/close them 100x a day for a decade it's why I can't wait for cold steel's tri-ad lock, which is basically an improved lockback, to come off of its patent. Because as the blade wears the parts that contact, in the tri-ad lock it just gets smoother/tighter and self adjusts. Demko really was a genius with that design, it is the strongest lock type and the longest lasting lock type, enough to last you multiple lifetimes, probably. Imaginine a buck 110 with a tri-ad lock, it'd be heaven
@@wyomingwrightare you still making them by chance? Or selling them? I just bought my first Buck 110 and that sheath is gorgeous. And if you’re not selling any, still, you did amazing work- it’s perfect!
So you cover your blade in blade oil and then you cut food with it? I thought these pocket knives were not meant for food because of the oil use for maintenance.