Some pictures of the Bradley alone and amongst some siblings

I haven't really used mine for what it was designed for yet either but I ordered another yesterday so once the second one comes in I'll start giving one of them a good workout :)

I agree with all your thoughts too.

So far, the GB seems to be a hard use bargain and a half!


Now, as yet it has seen no use. I normally carry a ZTMUDD for work, and it has seen the seamy underbelly of hell. But, it isn't a pretty knife.Andy
 
I haven't really used mine for what it was designed for yet either but I ordered another yesterday so once the second one comes in I'll start giving one of them a good workout :)

I agree with all your thoughts too.

So far, the GB seems to be a hard use bargain and a half!

Yup. IIRC, the MUDD cost more than the GB, too. Now, the MUDD has some features that I like more (bigger grip, sealed pivot), but the GB has better steel. I've not been overly impressed with the MUDD's 154 CM steel. It's OK but I've had to revive the edge pretty often.

I've heard that M4 is a tougher steel, so we'll see. It may just be too pretty to put through the wringer like I have the MUDD. :o

Andy
 
Yup. IIRC, the MUDD cost more than the GB, too. Now, the MUDD has some features that I like more (bigger grip, sealed pivot), but the GB has better steel. I've not been overly impressed with the MUDD's 154 CM steel. It's OK but I've had to revive the edge pretty often.

I've heard that M4 is a tougher steel, so we'll see. It may just be too pretty to put through the wringer like I have the MUDD. :o

Andy

You should get very good results - M4 is tool steel, and at something in the 64-65 Rc range it ought to be good on just about anything short of concrete.
 
Great pics, thanks! I really appreciate the comparisons, and they are beautiful photos to boot.
 
Back
Top