c.u.d.a. maxx lock?
c.u.d.a. maxx lock?
What type of lock, and how well is it? Im thinkn about the bowie blade 5.5
I'd rather be tried by 12, than carried by 6
- 4 s ter
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Burrellb
You might get more responses if you posted this on the Camillus Forum at BladeFourms.
http://www.bladeforums.com/forums/forum ... .php?f=695
Hope this helps.
David
You might get more responses if you posted this on the Camillus Forum at BladeFourms.
http://www.bladeforums.com/forums/forum ... .php?f=695
Hope this helps.
David
David
"Not all who wander are lost"
"To liner or not to liner? That is the question?" -- Sal
"Rule number nine: always carry a knife." -- Special Agent Jethro Gibbs/NCIS![wink ;)](./images/smilies/winking-face.png)
"Not all who wander are lost"
"To liner or not to liner? That is the question?" -- Sal
"Rule number nine: always carry a knife." -- Special Agent Jethro Gibbs/NCIS
![wink ;)](./images/smilies/winking-face.png)
- severedthumbs
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- silverback
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Nice
As it happens, I just had the chance to handle the bowie type maxx 5.5 this weekend.
It was passing through from the USA to a friend of mine and stopped by my place. :D
The lock is an integral linerlock and the action is smooth and without play. It must be one of the biggest folders out there, yet the handle is very slim and itt seems like it won't be as uncomfortable to carry as the size suggests.
Anyway, it's nicely made and very impressively big. :)
I suggest getting one right after you acquire an ATR. :p
It was passing through from the USA to a friend of mine and stopped by my place. :D
The lock is an integral linerlock and the action is smooth and without play. It must be one of the biggest folders out there, yet the handle is very slim and itt seems like it won't be as uncomfortable to carry as the size suggests.
Anyway, it's nicely made and very impressively big. :)
I suggest getting one right after you acquire an ATR. :p
Few people think more than two or three times a year; I have made an international reputation for myself by thinking once or twice a week. -George Bernard Shaw
Go is a pursuit of such value that one can devote a lifetime to it and have nothing to regret. Why not, then, challenge the limit of your powers. -Toshiro Kageyama 7-Dan
Go is a pursuit of such value that one can devote a lifetime to it and have nothing to regret. Why not, then, challenge the limit of your powers. -Toshiro Kageyama 7-Dan
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- Lost Jaguar
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A Plus.
A superb design, well-proportioned, light, perfectly balanced. I have only two criticisms: not lefty-friendly, and the D2 steel can be a bear to re-sharpen, if you let it get too dull. In normal use, the edge lasts a real long time. The lock on mine, and on others I've heard, was a little hard to release initially, but frequent usage quickly tuned it up fine. It's a frame lock, not a liner-lock, so the harder you hold it, the better it locks. It feels like a fixed blade in practical use.
My favorite non-Spyderco production knife. Go get one NOW. You won't regret it.
A superb design, well-proportioned, light, perfectly balanced. I have only two criticisms: not lefty-friendly, and the D2 steel can be a bear to re-sharpen, if you let it get too dull. In normal use, the edge lasts a real long time. The lock on mine, and on others I've heard, was a little hard to release initially, but frequent usage quickly tuned it up fine. It's a frame lock, not a liner-lock, so the harder you hold it, the better it locks. It feels like a fixed blade in practical use.
My favorite non-Spyderco production knife. Go get one NOW. You won't regret it.
Prepare for Anything, Expect Nothing