

This is my preferred method as well. Cut the butt out, cut from right below the sternum down (careful of the guts), and the cut the diaphragm loose, reach up and get the esophagus/trachea, and then just pull.Dnwrghtsr wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 6:57 amI use a Police 4 LW K390 serrated. I don’t cut the sternum I just reach in and pull everything out. It is long enough I can cut the butt hole out so I don’t have to saw any bone. Worked great K390 is much tougher than S110V but it rusts if you look at it wrong. I forced a patina seems to help. I have a pm2 S110V I love it because it holds an edge and doesn’t rust.
That is always a good question. Spyderco sharpens new knives on a wheel correct? If so, it will have a slight hollowness to the edge. Similar to how they make a hollow grind. It will cut well, but definitely not the most robust edge if you are hitting harder material abruptly.Bolster wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 9:47 amSorry to see the damage. Did you use your 110V Manix on its factory edge? Photos kinda look like factory. I'm not saying it will stop all chipping, but see how your knife performs after several re-sharpenings. Lots of people report better edge stability after the factory edge is gone.
My thoughts, too.Bolster wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 9:47 amSorry to see the damage. Did you use your 110V Manix on its factory edge? Photos kinda look like factory. I'm not saying it will stop all chipping, but see how your knife performs after several re-sharpenings. Lots of people report better edge stability after the factory edge is gone.
Speaking of butt holes, in days of yore, I use to use a long skinny melon knife for reaming rectums.Dnwrghtsr wrote: ↑Sat Dec 09, 2023 6:57 amI use a Police 4 LW K390 serrated. I don’t cut the sternum I just reach in and pull everything out. It is long enough I can cut the butt hole out so I don’t have to saw any bone. Worked great K390 is much tougher than S110V but it rusts if you look at it wrong. I forced a patina seems to help. I have a pm2 S110V I love it because it holds an edge and doesn’t rust.
You will not see a meaningful difference between the Manix and the Shaman. The Manix is actually intended to be Spyderco's "folding prybar" knife or as close to it. What you are seeing is just the cost of high carbide steels. They are very brittle and delicate, especially something as extreme as S110V. They are purely intended for draw cutting. Once you begin gouging at hard stuff with them like bone or wood or plastic, they are going to chip out badly. That kind of stuff is just not what they are designed to do. Friction is the name of their game.
Yes on s90v....and s30v is hardly any "tougher" than S110V or S90V. The whole reason why s35vn happened is because people in the beginning deemed s30v too brittle and chippy. s30v was marketed in the beginning as being as "tough" as a spring steel but also having high edge retention because of the magical "cpm" process. When that was proven false you began seeing attempts to correct it, which continue to this day with s45vn and SPY27. In each case 35vn; s45vn; SPY27 you see a constant reduction of carbon and vanadium with variations in other metals. High carbide is necessarily brittle and "tough" steels have comparatively awful edge retention. That's just how it is. You can't have your cake and eat it too.