Tri-Ad lock
- araneae
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I have yet to see a broken manix lock (or any other spydie mid lock so far as I can remember), that tells me its strong enough. The Triad lock might be great, but since my Spydies have yet to fail me I have confidence that the locks will continue to perform for years to come.
So many knives, so few pockets... :)
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
-Nick
Last in: N5 Magnacut
The "Spirit" of the design does not come through unless used. -Sal
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Fred Sanford
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I'm quite impressed on the amount of metal locked up on the Cold Steel and unimpressed about the lack of metal overlapping on the Manix lockup. I wonder why there is so little overlap of the lockbar into the blade tang?
"I'm calling YOU ugly, I could push your face in some dough and make gorilla cookies." - Fred Sanford
Probably because the more overlap means you have to press in the lock bar more distance (or more pressure if you make it a lever).David Lowry wrote:I wonder why there is so little overlap of the lockbar into the blade tang?
-Brian
A distinguished lurker.
Waiting on a Squeak and Pingo with a Split Spring!
A distinguished lurker.
Waiting on a Squeak and Pingo with a Split Spring!
Its actually a demko designed lock and he can use it when he wants. Andrew makes customs but I'm not sure what they run. If he ever left cold steel he could take it with him I'm sure. You could always commision something by him I believe ankerson has one of his customs he did a review on another forum. It looked very solid. Id personally like to see him make a large espada in american steel.
- SolidState
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I would not be surprised if you want a short overlap with your lock bar due to torque considerations as well as those previously mentioned.
"Nothing is so fatal to the progress of the human mind as to suppose that our views of science are ultimate; that there are no mysteries in nature; that our triumphs are complete, and that there are no new worlds to conquer."
Sir Humphry Davy
Sir Humphry Davy
- defenestrate
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So, looking at both designs I can see that:
a> the triad would not "suffer" from the slight vertical play a regular lockback would
b> the hefty stop pin will take more load than a weak lockspring pivot (I don't know what the term is but I think ya'll know what I'm talking about. the fulcrum, if you look at the lock as a lever)
what I'm wondering is:
a> in what cases does this design show any real appreciable differences from a good stout lockback
and
b> under "hard use", would the triad lock not be significantly more prone to galling/fatigue due to the surface area being far less across which the load is distributed while pressing down in cutting/batoning/whatever? Sure looks like it would be.
I will probably buy a cheap CS beater just to play with, but when it comes to overall design, I am unmoved from the :spyder: standard. True, maybe I need to baton my folding knife more if I want to have a dog in this fight, but I just don't see that the Triad lock offers any REAL improvements over a well made and engineered to suit application midlock/lockback.
a> the triad would not "suffer" from the slight vertical play a regular lockback would
b> the hefty stop pin will take more load than a weak lockspring pivot (I don't know what the term is but I think ya'll know what I'm talking about. the fulcrum, if you look at the lock as a lever)
what I'm wondering is:
a> in what cases does this design show any real appreciable differences from a good stout lockback
and
b> under "hard use", would the triad lock not be significantly more prone to galling/fatigue due to the surface area being far less across which the load is distributed while pressing down in cutting/batoning/whatever? Sure looks like it would be.
I will probably buy a cheap CS beater just to play with, but when it comes to overall design, I am unmoved from the :spyder: standard. True, maybe I need to baton my folding knife more if I want to have a dog in this fight, but I just don't see that the Triad lock offers any REAL improvements over a well made and engineered to suit application midlock/lockback.
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Happy, Happy, Happy! Peel, Peel, Peel!
Happy, Happy, Happy! Peel, Peel, Peel!
oh sureTexSierra wrote:I see more lock/blade overlap and immediately think more travel necessary on the release. I would prefer seamless actuation over perceived strength.
another way to look at it would be, if the locks were reversed and the spyderco had the triad lock, you and others would be saying how weak the cold steel looked, how there wasn't enough lock/blade overlap and how much stronger and better in every way the spyderco was
Come on now, it's the Spyderco company forum... did you expect a total lack of bias? :p .
I'm sure you could find both legitimate and nit-pickey problems with any knife... thats why purchases tend to come down to personal preference. Seems likely that membership here would indicate that one's personal preference lies with Spyderco.
I'm sure you could find both legitimate and nit-pickey problems with any knife... thats why purchases tend to come down to personal preference. Seems likely that membership here would indicate that one's personal preference lies with Spyderco.
Don't hit at all if it is honorably possible to avoid hitting; but never hit soft.
- Theodore Roosevelt
"I twisted the knife until I heard his heart-strings sing."
- Jim Bowie concerning Maj. Norris Wright
- Theodore Roosevelt
"I twisted the knife until I heard his heart-strings sing."
- Jim Bowie concerning Maj. Norris Wright
no i expect complete bias lol and i'm never disappointedJordan wrote:Come on now, it's the Spyderco company forum... did you expect a total lack of bias? :p .
I'm sure you could find both legitimate and nit-pickey problems with any knife... thats why purchases tend to come down to personal preference. Seems likely that membership here would indicate that one's personal preference lies with Spyderco.
i like spyderco a lot but my membership here doesn't really blind me to blatant facts or make me try to convince myself or others that a design is worse than another when it's clearly got big advantages over the other one.
i don't have to want to baton with it to see that it has those advantages and saying that i don't want to baton with a folder anyway doesn't make those advantages go away, and saying stuff like the lock bar has to be pressed further to release it so i don't like it is laughable
it's an improved design, i certainly would like a spyderco with a triad lock and if demko and spyderco ever collaborated this place would be all over it saying how much better it was than a regular lockback
and none of this makes the manix any worse, or any other backlock, a strong traditional backlock can be really really strong, the triad looks to be just an evolution of that
it's just funny man i love it. people make me laugh
I like to look at it as a different design... rather than an improved design, but perhaps that is my own bias peeking out :p .vic wrote:no i expect complete bias lol and i'm never disappointed
i like spyderco a lot but my membership here doesn't really blind me to blatant facts or make me try to convince myself or others that a design is worse than another when it's clearly got big advantages over the other one.
i don't have to want to baton with it to see that it has those advantages and saying that i don't want to baton with a folder anyway doesn't make those advantages go away, and saying stuff like the lock bar has to be pressed further to release it so i don't like it is laughable
it's an improved design, i certainly would like a spyderco with a triad lock and if demko and spyderco ever collaborated this place would be all over it saying how much better it was than a regular lockback
and none of this makes the manix any worse, or any other backlock, a strong traditional backlock can be really really strong, the triad looks to be just an evolution of that
it's just funny man i love it. people make me laugh
Don't hit at all if it is honorably possible to avoid hitting; but never hit soft.
- Theodore Roosevelt
"I twisted the knife until I heard his heart-strings sing."
- Jim Bowie concerning Maj. Norris Wright
- Theodore Roosevelt
"I twisted the knife until I heard his heart-strings sing."
- Jim Bowie concerning Maj. Norris Wright
I think he rates the locks to take 400-600lbs or force to fail, which is pretty close (actually a little less) than 200lbs per in. Isn't that the qualification for an MBC rating? B/c then I think the Chinook/Manix would actually be rated as stronger. So would the compression lock.
Could just be b/c he lacks the testing equipment that Spyderco has to produce and exact number though.
Could just be b/c he lacks the testing equipment that Spyderco has to produce and exact number though.
Yea buy the design you like the most within the specific category. If you're buying a Cold Steel get the Tri-Ad if you want, a BM go Axis, Spyderco...pick the one you like, etc.
With Spyderco's knack for innovating I wouldn't get caught up too much on the specifics. it's like pushing for CPM-S90v when they have stuff in the works most of us have never heard of. :) Innovation = Lead, Imitation = follow.
With Spyderco's knack for innovating I wouldn't get caught up too much on the specifics. it's like pushing for CPM-S90v when they have stuff in the works most of us have never heard of. :) Innovation = Lead, Imitation = follow.
- Orion's Belt
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