The Sunday Picture Show (January 15th, 2023)

DeSotoSky

Gold Member
Joined
Mar 21, 2011
Messages
6,642
Courtesy 1024 Sunday Picture Show label.jpg
Hello and welcome to the Sunday Picture Show. Share your Buck knives with others by posting pictures of them here. New or old, plain or custom, user or safe queen, one or a collection, we love to see them all. This weekly tradition was started in 2010 by ItsTooEarly (Armand Hernandez) and Oregon (Steve Dunn). Help keep the tradition alive. Feel free to click that 'LIKE' but lets not let it replace discussing and complimenting each others knives. Above all, enjoy the show. DeSotoSky (Roger Yost)

Interesting things that happened on January 15th....

1844 The University of Notre Dame founded in Indiana.
1919 A storage tank collapsed in Boston, sending more than two million gallons of molasses flowing through the city streets killing 21 people.
1929 Martin Luther King Jr. birthday.
2001 Wikipedia, a free internet based encyclopedia founded.

2009 Captain “Sully” Sullenberger lands his airliner in the Hudson when it flew into a flock of Geese shortly after takeoff damaging the engines.

When the pandemic started in 2020 I pretty much stopped going to gun shows or setting up at the local knife shows. My knife purchases slowed down quite a bit as a result. Went to a local gun show yesterday. A 107 ('87) and 110 (v5-3 '73/'74) followed me home.
107.1989.011423  (2).JPG107.1989.011423  (1).JPG107.1989.011423  (3).JPG107.1989.011423  (4).JPG110.3-Linr.2-Pin.011423  (4).JPG110.3-Linr.2-Pin.011423  (3).JPG110.3-Linr.2-Pin.011423  (2).JPG110.3-Linr.2-Pin.011423  (1).JPG
 
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The 1996 360 BuckTool was unique because had features no other multitool had at the time.
First tool to have locking implements. The lock was a push button on the handle.
F6y28XU.jpg

GpJTwRX.jpg

The 360 BuckTool had an innovative folding handles.
azGu9TW.jpg

NiBGdvz.jpg

X8rd5KZ.jpg

qWovq7x.jpg

C7ycYBb.jpg

JJxbXCI.jpg

The first multitool to have icons on the handle showing implements.
gqRzj04.jpg
 
thanks Roger for hosting. thanks y'all for the pics. great stuff as always.....

today is a new one for me, and one everyone seems to dislike but me........its the best slicing and lightest weight wise 119 built ever in a larger run. thinner stock and ffg. only thing that could make it better would be a full width tang setup like a 124.

20230115_084721.jpg
 
The 1996 360 BuckTool was unique because had features no other multitool had at the time.
First tool to have locking implements. The lock was a push button on the handle.
F6y28XU.jpg

GpJTwRX.jpg

The 360 BuckTool had an innovative folding handles.
azGu9TW.jpg

NiBGdvz.jpg

X8rd5KZ.jpg

qWovq7x.jpg

C7ycYBb.jpg

JJxbXCI.jpg

The first multitool to have icons on the handle showing implements.
gqRzj04.jpg
Cool.
I never knew.
That's a whole other rabbit hole a person could be drawn into.
I like your collection.👍
 
Thank you, Roger, for this Sunday Picture Show and for your continuing dedication to it's production. Also, thanks to all who post photos and comments.
Love the 'on this day' history you place here.

Here a set of four 107 steak knives that I have. Pre-date code, two line, script tang stamp with serrated tips. I tried to sharpen and refurbish myself but ended up sending them in for the SPA treatment.
qLIwmFb.jpg
 
thanks Roger for hosting. thanks y'all for the pics. great stuff as always.....

today is a new one for me, and one everyone seems to dislike but me........its the best slicing and lightest weight wise 119 built ever in a larger run. thinner stock and ffg. only thing that could make it better would be a full width tang setup like a 124.

View attachment 2046735
JB I have been trying to resist one of those 119's now I have to have one- Very nIce Pete
 
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