Texas Star
US Veteran
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFAAAZec3AE[/ame]
This guy has some really great vids on YouTube. He seems to clean up and sell vintage Swiss Army knives as well as collecting them. He has a whole series on just cleaning and repairing old ones.
Here, he has a look at a 2009 - made Climber compared to a horn-handled equivalent from the 1930's.
It's interesting to see the small changes over the decades.
That 2009 knife differs from the usual Climber in that it has commemorative red scales with gold trim for being made in the company 's 125th year. Normal Climbers have the usual scale choices of red, black, and whatever else they may be making at the time. Scales of buffalo horn or cattle horn are still offered on some models, as is stag.
I think you'll like this video. I think it's the one where he shows pics from a 1942 catalog, in which the knife was just called the Model 235, measuring the usual 91mm closed. There was an 84mm version, called 235K, presumably for "Kurtz", short.
I have a modern Climber, but all it offers over the Spartan is scissors. I keep it in an emergency bag that is basically a grooming bag like travelers use for shaving gear, etc. One can keep a knife, some food, flashlight, Kleenex, other stuff in it and have a handy addition to your car's supplies. I imagine that it'd go well on a bicycle, too.
I like the Camper, which subs a saw for scissors more than I like the Climber. But it's nice to get the Huntsman, which has both scissors and saw. It's too thick for pocket carry, but goes well in such a small pack or in a belt pouch. Swiss Army Brands sells such pouches.
This guy has some really great vids on YouTube. He seems to clean up and sell vintage Swiss Army knives as well as collecting them. He has a whole series on just cleaning and repairing old ones.
Here, he has a look at a 2009 - made Climber compared to a horn-handled equivalent from the 1930's.
It's interesting to see the small changes over the decades.
That 2009 knife differs from the usual Climber in that it has commemorative red scales with gold trim for being made in the company 's 125th year. Normal Climbers have the usual scale choices of red, black, and whatever else they may be making at the time. Scales of buffalo horn or cattle horn are still offered on some models, as is stag.
I think you'll like this video. I think it's the one where he shows pics from a 1942 catalog, in which the knife was just called the Model 235, measuring the usual 91mm closed. There was an 84mm version, called 235K, presumably for "Kurtz", short.
I have a modern Climber, but all it offers over the Spartan is scissors. I keep it in an emergency bag that is basically a grooming bag like travelers use for shaving gear, etc. One can keep a knife, some food, flashlight, Kleenex, other stuff in it and have a handy addition to your car's supplies. I imagine that it'd go well on a bicycle, too.
I like the Camper, which subs a saw for scissors more than I like the Climber. But it's nice to get the Huntsman, which has both scissors and saw. It's too thick for pocket carry, but goes well in such a small pack or in a belt pouch. Swiss Army Brands sells such pouches.
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