Gerber Traverse Review

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Apr 15, 2002
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Gerber Traverse Review

I picked this knife up at Target in Chicago for 19.99. I had seen it a few times and the overall shape of it reminded me of the old Gerber Folding Sportsman ( a knife I have never owned but have wanted to for some time) and the Gerber LST (one of the first knives I bought for myself when I was younger). I like the shape of this knife. It is aesthetically pleasing. It came packaged in a clamshell pack in a tin case. The packaging was deceptive to the weight of the knife. This knife is, in fact, very light weight.

It is a partially serrated liner locking folder with dual thumb studs and a “flipper,” a black Titainium Nitride coated blade, black painted grooves in the handle scales and a black painted low riding clip. The butt of the knife is flush with the hem of my pocket when the knife is clipped. This would be very discrete if the clip was not as wide as the knife handle itself.

My first impressions upon taking this knife out of the package was unimpressed. Opening the knife one handed was difficult due to the small and poorly placed thumbstuds. They are far too low on the blade when the knife is closed and sit flush, if not a hair below the handle scales. This would not be a problem if the “flipper” was more than a tiny nub that barely protrudes above the spine of the knife handles. The knife opens about one inch when the flipper is pushed down. Out of the box the pivot is too tight to complete opening with inertia. This might as well have a nail nick and be a two handed opener.

The edges of the scales were not chamfered and felt sharp. The blade pivot was tight and the action was gritty, but I attribute this more to the inside of the scales being painted black and the tang of the blade being coated with the TiNi. One of the washers appears to be plastic and the other appears to be bronze. There is no lanyard hole.

When I rubbed my fingers over the flat of the blade my fingertips were covered with a black powder. The grind lines were off on the edge of the knife. With one side it shaved easily and the other took a little more effort. It did not slice newsprint out of the box and cut standard notebook paper with some effort. The knife did lock up solidly with no blade play vertically or horizontally. The liner lock did protrude from the scales (there is no cutout in the handle to access the lock) about 2 mm. I would worry that in white knuckle grips this might cause the lock to disengage, especially when there is blade play or wear from use.

My knife had specks of rust on the flipper and on the tang of the knife where it meets the handle scales out of the box. The blade is approximately 3 inches long and the steel is not mentioned anywhere on the packaging. I assume it is the “surgical stainless” that a lot of Gerbers use nowadays. I’ve found its edge retention similar to Buck or Byrd brand knives. It has always taken a toothy edge for me and was easy to resharpen in the field. The edge retention was moderate but I tend to use a knife like this for dirtier jobs or cutting chores that are more dangerous to the knife’s edge. I understand however that the edge retention, ease of sharpening and the corrosion resistance of the Gerber mystery steel is different on a knife by knife basis. The Armor I used frequently commercial fishing and on the towboat was decent for the cost.

The Traverse is made in China.

Some pix:

Open, with a Kershaw Shallot for size comparison:

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Closed, clip side, with a Kershaw Shallot for scale:

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Open, showing liner lock engaged:

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Closed, showing useless thumb stud and “flipper”:

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I will post more after I reprofile the edge and as I get to use and evaluate this knife at work. My honest opinion and YMMV, is to avoid this knife unless you need a cheap beater, but for close to the the same price you could get a Byrd knife with far superior craftsmanship and fit and finish. If I don’t get around to using it I will probably end up giving it away to one of the NKP guys I work with on the tugs.

pete
 
Sorry that you were rippeed off on the price of the knife. It should have sold for $.99. Typical Gerber.:grumpy:
 
Sharpening-

It did not take too much time to reprofile this knife. I started reprofiling to a 25 degree inclusive angle on the plain edge part of the blade but the grinds were so uneven (12.5 degrees on one side approximately and I would say 15 degrees on the other.) that I set the back bevel at 25 inclusive and the edge at 30 inclusive. This setup usually works well when cutting tough materials that do a number on a knife’s edge. I used the medium grit to set the edge as I don’t like a highly polished edge. It is sharp enough to easily slice news print now.

I didn’t do anything to the serrations to sharpen them. They are sharp enough to easily trim my fingernails in the scallops but seem to be ground way too deep. I have found Gerber’s serration patterns to be extremely hit or miss. Sometimes they are deep and thick pointed and sometimes you get good ones that are scalloped nicely and are actually razor sharp and don’t snag when cutting fibrous materials. Mine also seems to have some strange extra large serration between the serrations and the ricasso. I am at a loss to what it is. It looks ok to use as a twine cutter or monofilament line cutter. I have never seen it before.

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Cutting

I don’t know when I will be going back on the boat to use this knife for daily cutting chores at work so I looked around the apartment for some things to cut up.

I started by whittling a popsicle stick (I know :rolleyes: ) but on the tug we regularly put points onto pine shingles to use them for plugging leaks in barges. The knife whittled fine with no loss to the edge.

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I moved onto a water bottle. This was one of the “green” environmentally sound thin water bottles. The knife cut through it easily and cut it into a plastic slinkie. I did not use the serrations again, only the plain portion of the blade. I had no trouble cutting the water bottle up. From time to time we cut up empty plastic water and spray bottles to use as containers or drip pans for fuel or oil or to put odds and ends in.

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Sometimes we use soda cans (if we have them laying around). The knife had no problem piercing the can (no tip damage) or push cutting through the aluminum. The can did scratch the blade coating up somewhat. I was able to rub my finger over the coating and black film was left on my finger tip. The scratches are still visible on the blade.

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I cut up a large, much thicker bottle using the serrations. They cut more like a saw than a knife through the plastic. The plain edge portion did not have any problem pushing through the heavy plastic but the serrations needed a back and forth sawing action to cut.

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I cut up a cardboard box from a case of bottled water. The plain edge portion was able to shave thin slices of cardboard off without hanging up.The serrated portion ripped and curled the cardboard before binding. These serrations are not optimal for ease of cutting. I may grind them flatter with a diamond stone. I don’t have any rope to try cutting on so will have to wait until I get back on the tug to see how they cut fibrous material.

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The edge of the knife feels chipped when felt with the edge of my finger nail but still pull cuts newsprint easily.

Again, the clip on the knife put the knife low in the pocket but it drew easily. The low riding clip makes for discrete carry but the width and shape of the clip defeats this purpose.

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The knife would make a good cutter for someone who wanted a beater or a NKP. It performed as expected per my experience with other Gerber knives. The steel sharpens up and handles like 440 class steel to me. I would venture a guess that it is either 440 A or B. Again, this knife is marketed as a one hand opener but I can open it faster with two hands than I can with the flipper or the thumb stud. I started pushing the flipper to start the blade and finishing opening it with the thumb stud.

Again, as a knife knut I would suggest spending the same amount of money on a knife like a Benchmade Pika or a Spyderco Byrd, or one of the less expensive Kershaws than on this knife. For a person who just wants a cutting tool that they don’t mind losing or breaking this knife would be ok. I will probably end up using it at work then giving it to one of my shipmates.

Pete
 
Nice review. Thanks for the hard work. It's almost like Gerber has two parts. One that makes knives like the LMF II and one that makes knives like these. Their pocket knife selection has been lacking for sometime in my opinion. But with that being said alot of the guys I know who aren't knife people would be tickled pink with that knife.
 
Sorry, but I wouldn't even take it for free. Thank you for the heads up. Now I know what a Gerber knife is like (besides the LMF)

I'll take a Kershaw OD-2/Skyline anyday.
 
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