Great knife. That's all my daughter remembers about my forest ranger uniform. A buck knife in a black sheath on my belt.
Had one my grandad gave me that i carried with me every where for 25 years! Even cut the tip of my thumb off with it.. sadly it broke last year though. I knew it would happen eventually as it was used hard regularly!
That is an old school drawback. I've equipped my 110 and 112 with after-market thumb studs.
Cult classic.
If you have to ask, you won't understand.
Buck is a brand name and requires capitalization. It is in fact a family name. Too many call any similar knife a "buck" and many who should know better are that sloppy. Many in the mainstream media are guilty of this. The average reporter cannot distinguish between a similar Buck, a Puma, a Schrade, etc. They think the 110 style is just some kind/sort of knife.
There is no such thing as kleenex. There is Kleenex, and then there are other brands of facial tissue.
When I was writing professionally about knives, Buck's PR people asked that I make this clear.
How did it break? What were you doing with it then?
I've see broken Buck knives, but someone was usually doing something stupid, like prying with one or trying to pound the blade through bone on an elk, using a rock...or throwing a knife not made for that.
Love the 110. What's not to like about wood, steel, and brass made in the USA? I own three and I believe the finger groove model has always been a custom shop feature. If you haven't tried Buck's nylon sheath for it I highly recommend it for the horizontal carry option.
Why has the 110 never been made with a drop point? Or has it?
Why has the 110 never been made with a drop point? Or has it?