soulspy wrote: ↑Thu Jan 20, 2022 10:28 amI got an early SE one too. I can see where people would believe there should be more blade in the handle, but I don't feel it's absolutely necessary. Almost seems like Sal's verbiage in the original description has forced the notion, but at the same time people don't seem concerned about getting more blade in the Sage5 (which has some room in the handle for more steel, just like the RJ).
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sal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 12:27 amHi Marius,
Sorry to disappoint you. Eric and I discussed the modification last week and decided that the new tooling would be very expensive for the very small amount gained. Besides, sales on the Rock Jumper have not been stellar. The Leaf Jumper was just approved and we'll see if the Leaf version does better in the market place. The "handle forward" concept seemed like a good idea, especially for those that like mid-back-locks. The same muscle memory works for those that usually close their mid-lock-backs with a flick to put the kick on the forefinger. It may be that that particular market is too small?
Time will tell.
sal
Hi Sal,
sal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 12:27 amHi Marius,
Sorry to disappoint you. Eric and I discussed the modification last week and decided that the new tooling would be very expensive for the very small amount gained. Besides, sales on the Rock Jumper have not been stellar. The Leaf Jumper was just approved and we'll see if the Leaf version does better in the market place. The "handle forward" concept seemed like a good idea, especially for those that like mid-back-locks. The same muscle memory works for those that usually close their mid-lock-backs with a flick to put the kick on the forefinger. It may be that that particular market is too small?
Time will tell.
sal
I think this exactly it. It is why I didn't buy it. The LJ I am more excited about. I think this handle forward is the way to go in the future. We could even have a Native like that so we can get our whole hand on the knife and not have something on the blade that catches on what we cut. The handle on that RJ is really an exciting development.Evil D wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 7:37 amsal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 12:27 amHi Marius,
Sorry to disappoint you. Eric and I discussed the modification last week and decided that the new tooling would be very expensive for the very small amount gained. Besides, sales on the Rock Jumper have not been stellar. The Leaf Jumper was just approved and we'll see if the Leaf version does better in the market place. The "handle forward" concept seemed like a good idea, especially for those that like mid-back-locks. The same muscle memory works for those that usually close their mid-lock-backs with a flick to put the kick on the forefinger. It may be that that particular market is too small?
Time will tell.
sal
I think it was a bit of a gamble bringing it out in a wharncliffe blade vs a leaf from the start. Seems like if it were a more direct competitor to a Delica or Stretch with a similar blade shape it may have caught people's attention better. Not everyone appreciates a good wharnie.
I'm sad to hear that this great model is not selling well. I hope it sticks around in some form or another.sal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 12:27 amHi Marius,
Sorry to disappoint you. Eric and I discussed the modification last week and decided that the new tooling would be very expensive for the very small amount gained. Besides, sales on the Rock Jumper have not been stellar. The Leaf Jumper was just approved and we'll see if the Leaf version does better in the market place. The "handle forward" concept seemed like a good idea, especially for those that like mid-back-locks. The same muscle memory works for those that usually close their mid-lock-backs with a flick to put the kick on the forefinger. It may be that that particular market is too small?
Time will tell.
sal
sal wrote: ↑Fri Jan 21, 2022 12:58 pmHi All,
Thanx much for your comments and support. By way of explanation;
An emergency cut on a rope, in a climbing situation, a fishing situation, or other, requires a one shot cut. handle close to cutting edge seems like a solution that prevented a sharpening choil or finger choil from fouling the cut. Doing this on a mid-lock-back is challenging. "Handle forward" was a solution. A Wharcliffe blade would be more effective on that type of cut than a curved (convex/belly) edge.
We'll watch closely to reaction to the Leaf blade version and I'm oping that you, (our esteemed knowledgeable Afi's) will provide that feedback.
sal
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