I think the dimples were hideous and commend DLT for deleting them. There are aesthetic ways to do functional things, if the dimples indeed served an actual purpose, they just looked like their placement was an afterthought and kept me well away from the original. Wish the proto gets made one day.
Like a fuller. Ed Schempp is a master craftsman who understands knife history and blades.
Do right always. It will give you satisfaction in life.
--Wovoka
(?) The Tuff already has a fuller… Thought we were talking about weight savings on the frame itself. I’m also pretty sure the material removed from the dimples on the original version did indeed lighten the frame. Do get me wrong about loving dimples on knives in general, they are just very much part of the character of the original one.
It's better to be good than evil, but one achieves goodness at a terrific cost. ––– Stephen King
On the previous page, there is one pictured that's half open and the choil flows into the handle almost like it's meant to be used in that position. I checked my other knives and none are like the Tuff in that position. Is this just part of the aesthetic design or is there a use for the Tuff when it's half open?
aquaseafoamshaman wrote:
On the previous page, there is one pictured that's half open and the choil flows into the handle almost like it's meant to be used in that position. I checked my other knives and none are like the Tuff in that position. Is this just part of the aesthetic design or is there a use for the Tuff when it's half open?
No. Also what other knives did you check. Almost all spydercos have that half open position where the finger choil matches the handle. It looks like it could lock in that position and be used as a push dagger, but none of them do. Its just where the curves match up. Do not use a half opened unlocked knife.
"Rome's greatest contribution to mathematics was the killing of Archimedes."
aquaseafoamshaman wrote:
On the previous page, there is one pictured that's half open and the choil flows into the handle almost like it's meant to be used in that position. I checked my other knives and none are like the Tuff in that position. Is this just part of the aesthetic design or is there a use for the Tuff when it's half open?
No. Also what other knives did you check. Almost all spydercos have that half open position where the finger choil matches the handle. It looks like it could lock in that position and be used as a push dagger, but none of them do. Its just where the curves match up. Do not use a half opened unlocked knife.
I checked the Shaman, Smock, and GB1 and none of them have the look/flow of the Tuff in that position. It just caught my eye, and I wasn't sure if I was missing something.
aquaseafoamshaman wrote:
On the previous page, there is one pictured that's half open and the choil flows into the handle almost like it's meant to be used in that position. I checked my other knives and none are like the Tuff in that position. Is this just part of the aesthetic design or is there a use for the Tuff when it's half open?
No. Also what other knives did you check. Almost all spydercos have that half open position where the finger choil matches the handle. It looks like it could lock in that position and be used as a push dagger, but none of them do. Its just where the curves match up. Do not use a half opened unlocked knife.
I checked the Shaman, Smock, and GB1 and none of them have the look/flow of the Tuff in that position. It just caught my eye, and I wasn't sure if I was missing something.
Part of it is the angle of that picture and just the design of the handle. Look at a shaman or pm2 opened where the choil curve matches the handle curve at the same angle that pic was taken at. Look at a dragonfly opened like that as well.
To my eye a lot of spydies look like they have that half open flow, where it seems like they could be a push dagger if they locked in that position.
"Rome's greatest contribution to mathematics was the killing of Archimedes."
…
I guess I’m one of the minority that prefers the dimples, it was a big part of the original’s character (and any weight loss on it was appreciated!).
…
Initially I was not a big fan of the dimples, but over time I’ve come to like them as a quirky characteristic of the design.
Hans Favourite Spydies: Military, PM2, Shaman, UKPK Others: Victorinox Pioneer, CRK L Sebenza 31, CRK L Inkosi
joeldworkin307 wrote:
It's Spyderco's Strider or Hinderer, in a better steel, at a better price. I am deciding between one and two!
Same. At this price it will probably be just one. Although if they take more than a day to sell out I might get 2. This is one of the handful that I want a backup for.
What I hope is that another dealer will do another run in different color and steel. But I dont know if that would happen with this model. The slysz bowie will certainly get exclusives from other dealers, the rock lobster probably will not come back, the tuff...??? I hope so.
"Rome's greatest contribution to mathematics was the killing of Archimedes."
I have a question though....Is the oversized pivot really necessary? Does it add any real structural integrity to the knife?
I would expect it does make it stronger, it you go back and look at the pics comparing it to a Shaman, which itself is not exactly a dainty knife, it dwarfs the Shaman in pretty much every measurement. Look at the difference in stop pin size. It should also help to minimize blade play development after being used hard.
Unfortunately I'm betting that the vaaaaast majority of these will never see hard use so we may never know truly how tough they really are. When you have a $350 knife that most people will be reluctant to actually abuse, you suddenly have a $50 Tenacious that ends up withstanding more actual use and abuse and is much more likely to be pushed to it's limit and used harder than the overbuilt hard use model.
Yeah, the Tuff is more of an design icon than actual user. Not that it could not withstand hard use, but if you need a knife that tuff, you grab a fixed blade most of the time. If it were a LITTLE bit thinner/lighter, I would get one and actually use it.