Anyways, I picked up a drop point spike, and I might try an XL Voyager next. Here's a shot of the spike:

Here it is in the sheath after I added paracord loops for horizontal belt carry. They're loose because the sheath is more narrow than my belt, so they need to have some give to fit.


Keep in mind these are just first impressions, I've only cut two things with it.
- The edge wasn't as sharp as Spydercos. Not surprised, but it does make me feel spoiled by what I expect from a factory edge. The sharpest parts could scrape arm hair, while some sections couldn't even do that. Gave it a few passes on my UF bench stone and it cleanly shaves now.
- The edge is ground nice and thin. It's almost a true scandi grind. Almost looks like it was ground true scandi, then a microbevel was applied with a powered buffer or similar. I'm pretty pumped about buying a knife in plain edge that doesn't require reprofiling right out of the box, honestly don't know the last time that has been the case.
- The sheath has nice retention. Buying a $25 fixed blade gives me hesitation in regards to sheath safety, but this sheath passes that test with flying colors. I'd have 100% confidence carrying inverted.
- The eyelets on the sheaths are small. Very small. Paracord (7 strand) barely fit through them. I'm going to have to drill larger holes if I ever attempt to use a g-clip with this knife, but I think I'll opt for some paracord loops. That will let me pocket carry, horizontal belt carry, inverted backpack strap carry or vertical belt carry using the same setup, no switching around a tek-lok.
- The slits on the sheath are worthless for using with a belt, unless maybe you're a mouse :D They're tiny. You might be able to fit some narrow molle straps through them, but if you're like me and you hate neck carry...you're gonna have to do a little DIY to make something work.
- The handle is too thin and not very filling for heavy, pro-longed use. I figured this would be the case. It will work just fine for typical EDC uses, and how thin the overall design is will greatly improve how well it carries. It's a trade-off I felt was worth it for the intended use I had in mind for this knife. I'll use it for general EDC, and use something with a more hand filling grip (Aqua Salt, for example) when I know I'll be doing a lot of cutting.
- The grip is MUCH improved over the first gen spikes. I always thought it was a neat line of fixed blades, but the originals had terrible handles IMO. Very thin cord wrap that felt fragile, and not as much guard as I prefer. This has a deeper guard, deeper index choil, much more texture to the grip, and plain feels better in every way over the original.
- Very light. The knife AND sheath weigh about 3oz, or the same as my beloved Pacific Salt. Hard to beat that when it comes to stout fixed blades with a 4" edge. Enuffs come in at 3.8oz (without sheath I believe, but that might include sheath) with less than 3" of cutting edge, for comparison.
- I could do without the top guard. It's small enough to not get in the way of my thumb on the spine, but I'm still tempted to grind it off. It should still work with the stock sheath that way based on what I can tell, but it'd probably rattle a bit.
- Having THE SPIKE on the side of the blade looks silly, I plan to sand it off. I'm not a fan of big lettering on my blades. I like a simple tang stamp, and maybe a small designer logo. Didn't care for MILITARY written across my old Millie either :p
- The included ball chain is black instead of silver, which I thought was a nice touch. I like black. It blends into clothing better and looks more discreet. I plan to ditch the chain for black paracord but I still appreciate it.
- Tip is thicker than I like. I expected that would be the case. I'll test it out, stabbing into some cardboard, fruits etc., and see what I think. I may do a bit of a distal taper by hand depending on how things go.
- Seems like a good example of "everything you need, nothing you don't." 4" of blade, which is my preferred length, with hardly any wasted steel. It's almost all cutting edge. Just enough handle for my big hands to not feel like they'll slip off, and no more. Slim and trim, easy to carry in a coat pocket or cargo pocket. Sheath is simple and no frills, with just enough space for my preferred carry option. Very straight forward design.
Overall I'm a happy customer. Is the overall quality up to par with my old Street Bowie? No, not quite. But for the price it sells for, it seems like a solid knife. Spending a minute touching up the edge, five minutes sanding off the logo, then another 2 or 3 minutes installing the paracord, and I've got myself a new EDC FB. Light, easy to carry, and feels plenty robust.
Time will tell how the GERMAN STAINLESS (4116) stands up, haha. I've never used it, expecting something in the realm of 440C/8Cr13MoV.