Stepping Back from the Salt

Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
27,509
Ever have to back away from a knife to appreciate it more? At first glance I thought the Caribbean Salt wasn't going to end up as a real contender for me. I already have a Pacific Salt and I don't spend that much time around saltwater. Then I took a step back and evaluated it as a knife, not just a Salt knife. Full sized blade, robust build, compression lock. Sounds like a hard working knife to me, with the added bonus of being rust free. Now it tops my list of anticipated Spydies.
 
Yea me too :) But i am around salt all the time, and Florida, and i sweat a bunch becaue of humidity, and and and LOL.
 
I have a Dragonfly2 Salt and I have to use it, I've carried it a few times but because the one I have is fully serrated I'm more apt to leave it on the dresser and take the SS Dragonfly I have instead. I feel I haven't given the H1 a fair shake so I may need to make a concerted effort to make sure it gets into my pocket.

3O0BDb1.jpg


Other than the rust free ability is there any other reason to set it above any of the other stain resistant steels currently in use by Sal and company?
 
I have a Dragonfly2 Salt and I have to use it, I've carried it a few times but because the one I have is fully serrated I'm more apt to leave it on the dresser and take the SS Dragonfly I have instead. I feel I haven't given the H1 a fair shake so I may need to make a concerted effort to make sure it gets into my pocket.

3O0BDb1.jpg


Other than the rust free ability is there any other reason to set it above any of the other stain resistant steels currently in use by Sal and company?

That spyderedge offers unreal cutting performance. A fully serrated knife also give you more cutting edge vs a plain edge knife of the same length.

I like to carry plain edge cadet along with a spyderedge to have all my basses covered. :)
 
Back
Top