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Binding: Sports
Brand: Buck Knives
Color: Wood/Brass
EAN: 0033753092107
Item Dimensions: 160100040280
Label: Buck Knives
Manufacturer: Buck Knives
Model: 110
MPN: 110-9210
Publisher: Buck Knives
Studio: Buck Knives
Features:- Includes Knife, Box, Sheath, and Warranty Registration Card
- The Buck 110 Folder Hunter features a 420HC stainless steel clip point blade
- The 110 comes with natural Woodgrain handles and polished brass bolsters
- The 110 is the most copied knife design in the World!
- The 110 Folding Hunter, as with all Buck Knives, features Buck's 4-Ever Warranty
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: Folding Hunter, Lockback Knife, 3-3/4" Clip Blade, 4-7/8" Closed, 8 OZ Natural Wood Grain Handle, Black Leather Sheath.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I bought this knife for daily purposes. This knife feels great on hand with some nice weight. and the knife feel decent and built with good quality. I will buy one more soon for my collection.
this is knife looks beautiful, came in sharp and great weight feeling.
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Great knife, good price. A little bigger than I was use to but can get use to it. Just remember you don't need to buy a sheath for it since one comes with it.
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Years ago I ended up as a housemate in Bethel, Alaska with a group of four guys (I am female).
After spending a summer sharing the house, honey buckets, steam baths, and too numerous to count evenings of friendly conversation and the freshest fish I've ever tasted... it was time for me to leave and return back to the Pacific Northwest.
The guys got together and bought me this knife w/ sheath, a leather belt, and a plaid shirt as a going away gift. The shirt has long since fallen apart, the belt went to a smaller waisted person years ago -- but the knife remains one of my prize possessions. I use it constantly and carry it in my purse daily (unless I have to fly - and then it goes into my luggage rather than carry-on.)
This knife has been all over the country, served me on hundreds of camping trips as well as being used in office settings, dinners, car repairs, event setup, etc., etc. this list goes on.
It holds an edge, has enough weight to make it useful in numerous settings, looks good and hope to pass it on to my granddaughter when she graduates from high school (in 15 years!!)
People are always a bit amazed when I pull it out of my purse as it isn't exactly dainty, but it has been the best 'pocket knife' I could ask for.... and it always reminds me of the generous nature of the guys who gave it to me 30 years ago.
Rating: -
Back when I was a kid, if you had a Swiss Army Knife & a Maglite, you were on top of the world. There wasn't anything in the outdoors, or your dad's garage, that you couldn't handle. I sawed twigs, built a birdhouse, cut bait, cut twine, cut fishing line, opened cans, opened bottles, sliced salami, cut PB&J into quarters for sharing, took out splinters with the tweezers, changed batteries, and took apart everything around the house that had fasteners that the knife could turn. It was a glorious time. The envy of all the other 8 year olds in the 3rd grade. That first knife followed me to school all the way to college. Back in those days, teachers didn't freak out about a kid with a weapon if you had a Swiss Army or a Buck Knife.
My Buck Knife was always on my hip, in a leather holster, for all the other kids in Middle School to be jealous of. As a little boy, I was able to split sandwiches in half for sharing, slice apples for the teacher, and every little boy loved it when the pretty teacher asked to borrow his Buck Knife to open envelopes and packages with.
Back in those days, the world was simpler. We didn't have crack cocaine, gang violence, or Oprah. All that we cared about was combing our hair in a ducktail like Fonzie, and acting cool with the ladies like Jack Tripper & Larry Dallas. I eventually moved onto a Leatherman Tool, a Streamlight, and a Benchmade. But those were the days.
There's a whole new generation of kids waiting in the wings to live out those same memories for themselves. I was just thinking of all that as I was boxing up a Leatherman Kick & Maglite 3D for my little 8 year old nephew. Why the Leatherman over the Swiss Army? He'll never use that corkscrew - I never did. Those toothpicks are just not sanitary. The leatherman has the pliers. We had Swiss Army as kids, simply because Leatherman wasn't invented yet. In those days, Swiss Army was the best. Those days aren't gone for good. Only these days, the kids are idolizing big shiny rims, gold teeth, and big booty biatches.
Rating: -
My father had this knife and when I was a kid I loved it. I would take it out and lightly oil it and sharpen it for him. Once being a stupid kid, I was throwing it at a tree trunk and I broke off a half inch off the tip. I hid it from him but he eventually found it.
Fast forward 20 years later and I was a new Army private going to school at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio Texas. I bought one for both my father and I and we both still have ours.
This knife is truly a classic and should be issued to every red blooded American boy at birth. I've skinned a dozen deer with it. I have it here in Iraq with me now.
There's no play in the blade and the wood and brass is simple yet handsome. The brass is soft, like some reviews have said, but every nick and ding in mine would have broken a lesser knife. The blade is like silk and I can readily shave with it.
True, it is rather large for a folding knife and to the novice it may take two hands to open. A lot of the guys in my platoon have the newer high speed knives that only need one hand to open and everything. But the talcum-powder dust here clogs them and the springs can break. Again, simplicity and elegance wins the day. When they need a sharp knife, a real sharp knife they ask for mine. I have complete faith in the quality and ruggedness that I have no problem lending it to the soldiers in my platoon.
Buy it and pass it on. I will be passing mine on but not before buying my own again!
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