In the camp Spyderco collectors in Russia, confusion reigns :eek: . One after another, in the manufacture of linings on the handle were broken two Spyderco Mule ZDP-189

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I'd say it mostly the last of those, or rather that, at the size and hardness of the ZDP Mules, they need to be treated more like a ceramic blade than like machetes. Seems to me, since the purpose of the Mules was to test a variety of steels on a given platform, some of them are bound to be less suitable, suitable for different uses, or require different treatment, than others.noddy wrote:Is there any idea if this is a generic problem with Mules and their HT - isolated hiccups - or is it just ZDP189 needs to be laminated at that scale, hardness and relative thickness?
Well, this is the first knife I've ever owned that I couldn't get much sharper than it came from the factory. Mine would shave, but certainly wasn't hair splitting sharp.MCM wrote:"I can't seem to get it any sharper than it came from the factory"
I am sure I cant either!
Both mine came hair splitting sharp!
I don't think they should crack like that when you are putting a handle on them. That was the other part....let users make thier own handles. That looks a lot like the fracture lines you would see on ATS-55.freeman7 wrote:I think Paul hit the nail on the head. The Mule project was not meant to produce a fantastic series of perfect knives. Rather, the idea was to use different steels in essentially the same knife pattern so that we, ourselves, could experiment and see just how the steels differ from each other.
I'm sure some folks have successfully put handles on their ZDP Mules, so perhaps the operative question should be "what did they do differently from the folks who failed." I see the Mule program is something like Beta software. You are, in essence, the "R&D" department.demtek9 wrote:I don't think they should crack like that when you are putting a handle on them. That was the other part....let users make thier own handles. That looks a lot like the fracture lines you would see on ATS-55.
You don't try to bend steel with the same pressure you would break a pencil with, unless russia has super, extra huge , specially engineered space pencils.He apply a soft affort by hands, trying to bend a knife, and blade has broken.
Then the best thing to do, if you have one which is not broken, would be to sell it to someone who would appreciate it for what it is, rather than being upset by what it is not.yuraelektra wrote:Yes!
I do not know what to do.
Try to break? I feel sorry for the knife! Do not break and make the handle? I do not need a knife, which can be broken arms! :mad:
Sir,The Deacon wrote:Then the best thing to do, if you have one which is not broken, would be to sell it to someone who would appreciate it for what it is, rather than being upset by what it is not.