|
|
|||||||
| Register | Forum Rules | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
| Forum Donations | DefensiveCarry Store | DefensiveCarry Gallery | USGO Gallery | Related Links | Forum Help & Extras |
| Defensive Knives & Other Weapons Most people that carry a gun also carry a knife or other weapon as a backup. Finding a good blade is often harder than finding a good pistol or revolver. |
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
#1 | |
|
VIP Member
![]() Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,213
![]() |
The Spyderco Manix, then and now
Note: I'll get some pictures added later...
A year later, I’m still loving the Manix. About a year ago I acquired a Spyderco Manix. I went without for a couple of months after losing my first one (grrrrr) but I quickly recovered another one. It’s my favorite single bladed folding knife ever. The new has worn off, but I am still appreciating this knife. My old comments from about a year ago: Quote:
The best thing about it, hands down, is the retention of this knife. It locks into your hand, or at least mine does. There is a slightly smaller version which some have been highly critical of saying it’s not small enough, but I feel this design calls for a big knife. Personally, I’ve always liked the bigger knives anyway. Sure they take up more real estate, but trying to hold onto a tiny folder is no fun. I don’t plan on trying the smaller one just yet. It does look like it’d be easier to carry while providing the same kind of experience, but I just like the one I already have. As I mentioned a year ago, it has no sharp corners, which makes it easy to carry. The G10 scales where you carry and draw it wear down a little with time such that it no longer drags when it’s drawn. The Manix is not so much anything new, it’s just about time someone put such a knife together. You get the best possible blade geometry I’ve ever experienced with materials and workmanship that only expensive custom knives can realistically match or narrowly exceed. Not that the Manix is cheap at the $100ish mark, but if you’re one of those people who needs him a tough knife, brother this knife is tough. Really it’s a drop point blade in a lockback folder, updated for the year 2004. The Manix doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel, and it does everything that new, less conventional designs do for the most part. Honestly, I use my knife to slice and cut far more often than I resort to using it for defense, and I like a knife that can handle it all well. I have, however, had occasion to kill a rat with it. It might be somewhat interesting to entertain a lightweight Manix with skeletonized liners, as this knife’s lock is ridiculously strong. However, I feel the heavy full liners are what takes all of the play out of the knife. I’ve never experience vertical, horizontal, or lateral play for the record. The only two ways the Manix fails me is that I feel like the placement of the lock is such that I would depress it in the reverse edge in grip, and it takes practice to get it where it can be “popped” open in the conventional reverse grip. The perfect knife however, much like the perfect pistol, is always just out of reach. It works for me and I look forward to another year with it. I’m happy with it and haven’t seen anything in the last 12 months to convince me I can do better.
__________________
I am The Armed Educator. |
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Assistant Administrator
![]() Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: South West PA
Posts: 25,468
![]() |
Great review and write-up Euc.
I still want a Kershaw BOA but meantime, find my Buck Mayo TNT a great folder - soon I hope to be better for opening with one of those lil' gizmo's you posted about - have two on order.
__________________
Chris - P95 NRA Certified Instructor & NRA Life Member. "To own a gun and assume that you are armed is like owning a piano and assuming that you are a musician!." If a BG dies as the result of pointing a gun at me, then he has merely succumbed to an occupational hazard of being a thug |
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|