I may be branded a heretic for saying this, but if only someone could now convince them (Case) to upgrade their steel, if only slightly, say to 12c27 or even better 13c26, and run it a couple of numbers higher hardness... Oh my!
If they actually did that, they would be in competition with makers that just about own that market outright in the now, namely Kershaw, Spyderco and Benchmade. From those guys you can get a full range of steels, and scale materials vastly superior to that soft zytel. I have three large non traditional work knives that I carry in rotation, and they are
screwed together for easy dismantling for cleaning (not riveted) and all have machined liners, G10 handles, and much better steels
for me than CASE currently offers. Two are made here in the USA, and one in Taiwan. All are great knives and I use the hell out of them, and on occasion clean all the construction adhesives, sealants and all other manner of crap off of them with charcoal lighter fluid. Can't do that with Zytel.
To me, with the exception of the peanut (that little knife with the little plastic scales has a distinct truck stop "gimme" knife look) they look like they are trying to crack into the medium work/diposable utility knife market. Then on the other hand, maybe they were just looking for a cheaper CASE knife to put out in the marketplace. From their side, I can see how it would have its economic appeal to have an assembler sitting at a machine with a pile of parts simply riveting together a product rather than hand assembling and hand finishing. With the end product, however it fits is well... however it fits. If it is terrible, they can grind off the rivets and put the good pieces back in the bucket for another knife.
Little training, little skill, and inexpensive (say... ten cents a side for the injected plastic scale?) materials and you have a pretty profitable product if it sells.
My experience with Zytel is not good for a work knife (think BUCK here) and I won't buy any more. Top that with CASE's preference for soft steels, and I must say I don't get the appeal.of this line from them. I was pretty put off by these knives, but then, CASE wouldn't make them if they weren't popular enough to sell. I dunno; Zippo is certainly a lot more savvy about marketing than I am. I am sure these will find a market along with all the other knives of their kind.
Robert