Spyderco knives - did a bit of research this morning and learned quite a bit!

I'm a fan of Spyderco and own several. I have a couple of different Endura models I carry, along with a Tenacious. I bought a Civillian out of curiosity a few years ago, quite the knife. I don't carry it at all, because reasons lol. I also have a Matriarch 2 which I do carry a bit.

I like that they created the Byrd line to create high quality knockoffs of their own products in China. I've got a Byrd Cara Cara in my emergency kit and a Byrd Crossbill for cutting at orchards and other u-pick type places where it can be needed.
 
Back in my working days, I remember all the cops raging about Spyderco knives; personally, I've never seen the attraction. The plastic/nylon scales are a huge turnoff. To my eye, they just look cheap.

Law Enforcement is where I first encountered them too. You're not wrong about the cheap look that the FRN scales on some of their knives have. They do their job well though, I've never had one slip in my hand or break, but then I also buy a knife for the blade quality, not the scales.
 
I love my Spyderco Delica in K390. And my six other Spyderco knives.

Spyderco is a great company and worth looking into. Sal Glesser, the founder and chief designer of Spyderco knives, falls somewhere between Benjamin Franklin and John M. Browning as an American inventor/entrepreneur. We would not have pocket clips on knives, and we would not have knife steels like K390, were it not for Sal Glesser.

I love my Buck knives, too, but a 1956 Chevy Bel Air is not Honda S2000.
 
I'm a fan. Too many to count.

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I've carried a Spyderco Native 5 for ~ two years now, and I love it. It holds an edge better than any knife I've ever owned, and I've found the edge can be restored to better than a razor edge with just stropping many times before I have to go back to the stones.View attachment 785013
LOL, I'd completely forgotten I have a Native, buried away somewhere !! Now I wanna go dig it up and play with it!!
I keep a ( Japanese-made VG10) Dragonfly close by, with a small stash of tools I keep handy I'm my bedroom. That thing is practically a surgical scalpel.
I had 2 Delicas,( I think they're about the perfect EDC), but I traded them for an irresistible pile of 9mm ammo, years ago.
I also still have one of the Taiwanese Tenacious-series blades, from back when they were only $25 or so, and theyre solid knives, but even those bastages have gotten expensive!!
 
I have a few older Spyderco knives. I bought this one, a CO4 Serrated in 1983, they made dedicated left hand versions in the early days of the company. I should have bought a LH Co-Pilot with the brass liners but never did.

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Back in my working days, I remember all the cops raging about Spyderco knives; personally, I've never seen the attraction. The plastic/nylon scales are a huge turnoff. To my eye, they just look cheap.
I would never argue with you about Spyderco knives being a work of beauty, they are certainly not! In fact even the owner of the company states, "made for your hands - not for your eyes" in his statements about his own knives. They are utilitarian knives and the ultra light weight of 2.3 ounces in a knife that size is a great thing for me. I EDC a pistol, a spare magazine, keys, wallet, a small SAK, glasses, cell phone and like appreciate the light weight of the Spyderco Delica. For a BBQ knife or something I want to impress someone with I have many others I'd grab first. Not only that, the K390 steel is about the best I have ever seen on any knife brand. I've yet to find a blade that is easy to make razor sharp but still maintain a perfect edge throughout some rough rough cutting tasks.

Again, Spyderco never really appealed to my visual sensors either and before receiving it as a gift that is probably why I never owned one before. After owning one for years now I have come to appreciate the "ugly ducking"!
 
I have carried a Spyderco Delica for years, either flat ground or serrated. More recently, I found a model I prefer, the Mannix, which has a ball-bearing hub lock. It's faster to deploy and safer to fold than the traditional back lock, and can be operated with one hand.
 
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