If you want a Tribal Lock with those specific features I would not put off buying one. Neither its bald head nor its CV are the norm in Tribal Locks so Case might not make another production run for a long time if ever. For example Case made CV CopperLocks but they've only made the mini version in CV lately so full size ones are hard to find. I like that Tribal Lock's shield. I like shields that write the brand name and USA.
Wouldn't it be your first carbon steel Case? If so it could put your old Old Timer in perspective. I bought my two Old Timers in the early 1970s. At retail they were around 1/2 to 2/3s the the price of the same models made by Buck and Case. As you've written Old Timers were easy to get sharp but dulled quickly. Carbon steel Cases I bought within a year or two of my Old Timers held an edge much longer. Despite old pamphlets that advertised Old Timer steel as 1095 you usually do not get the best of anything at the lowest price.
Also I'm curious how Case's new CV's edge retention would compare to your Buck's 5060. The 5 means that not considering iron and carbon chromium is the element present as the largest percentage and it's over 1%. It is likely that Case's CV is a 50xx steel.
Wouldn't it be your first carbon steel Case? If so it could put your old Old Timer in perspective. I bought my two Old Timers in the early 1970s. At retail they were around 1/2 to 2/3s the the price of the same models made by Buck and Case. As you've written Old Timers were easy to get sharp but dulled quickly. Carbon steel Cases I bought within a year or two of my Old Timers held an edge much longer. Despite old pamphlets that advertised Old Timer steel as 1095 you usually do not get the best of anything at the lowest price.
Also I'm curious how Case's new CV's edge retention would compare to your Buck's 5060. The 5 means that not considering iron and carbon chromium is the element present as the largest percentage and it's over 1%. It is likely that Case's CV is a 50xx steel.
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