My first knife was a buck from Walmart when I was in cubscouts. I still have it somewhere. Most of the time I carry a CIVIVI Chevalier Flipper or a leatherman now.
My 1984 Case Sod Buster Jr. Is identical.My EDC is my dad’s (RIP) old Case XX Sodbuster. The plowman on the blade rubbed off a long time ago. I used to be able to faintly see it in the right light, but no more. I think he got this knife sometime in the 70s.
At $35 they must be made in China now?My 1984 Case Sod Buster Jr. Is identical.
Case knives made since 1970 can be dated using this guide:
At $35 it’s still one of the least expensive models Case sells:
Nope. Made in Bradford Pennsylvania.At $35 they must be made in China now?
Wow, still made in USA. Impressive!Nope. Made in Bradford Pennsylvania.
I notice though, that a bone handle almost doubles the price of a Sodbuster.
Wow, still made in USA. Impressive!
Here’s a brand thats extremely well built, titanium and cpms25vn steel.
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TOOR Merchant Not a flipper but a thumbstud and good enough for dress or jeans and for utility use or
Defense.
The Sodbuster is a great, very basic knife that does what I need a knife to do. Pretty simple. My dad never had much money so I figured it must’ve been a cheap knife back in the day. The steel seems pretty subpar and it doesn’t take or hold an edge very well. My son’s Benchmade is a much better knife, as an example of contrast. I mostly carry my dad’s knife because it was his. I can still picture his crooked fingers fishing it out of the front pocket of his Wranglers. Some images remain for all of life.The Sod Buster is an extremely old Case pattern. It’s cheap because it has no bolsters, just a synthetic handle, brass liner, a pivot, two stud pins, and a blade.
Notice though, if Case uses bone instead of Delrin or Micarta it about doubles the retail price.
Cattle shin bones are a byproduct of beef processing, If there wasn’t a demand for knife scales they’d get ground up as bone meal or fertilizer. There’s likely not a penny’s worth of cow bone by the ton in a set of knife scales but the average cost of labor in wealthy nations like the USA, Germany, Japan, and other western nations means bone handles from nice, prosperous countries cost more than the blades.
That’s why my flea market special flipper is better. The supreme thermoplastic is G-10. And when I look at my G-10 scales closely there are no mold marks or tooling marks. Somewhere in China a laborer loaded a machine that made endless numbers of perfect scales, for nearly nothing each. And they fit, perfectly.
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Remember the flea market owener wants the best seller he can buy for $3.50 and sell for $15 on his display counter.
My gas station special has a nice sized 3 1/2 inch D2 clip blade.
The secret is making a good, cheap handle for it, with a clip instead of a sheath.
I think Doom Blades found the perfect Chinese knife maker.
The Sodbuster is a great, very basic knife that does what I need a knife to do. Pretty simple. My dad never had much money so I figured it must’ve been a cheap knife back in the day. The steel seems pretty subpar and it doesn’t take or hold an edge very well. My son’s Benchmade is a much better knife, as an example of contrast. I mostly carry my dad’s knife because it was his. I can still picture his crooked fingers fishing it out of the front pocket of his Wranglers. Some images remain for all of life.
An extremely practical, working man's knife. Quite venerable.My EDC is my dad’s (RIP) old Case XX Sodbuster. The plowman on the blade rubbed off a long time ago. I used to be able to faintly see it in the right light, but no more. I think he got this knife sometime in the 70s.
The odds are a loved one bought him that Case Sodbuster, and gave it to him as a gift.
Why Case still makes knives in Bradford and all the other American brands, even Buck, have some Asian production is Case has made and sold more expensive American knives for at least a hundred years than all the other brands combined.
Using stamped bolsters, Schrade sold more pocket knives at maybe half the price as a Case, and a two thirds the price of a Buck, forever until Schrade went bankrupt.
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When I paid $25 for my Winterbottom (Delrin fake) Queen in 1974 a Case Folding Hunter cost more.
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To this day carbon steel (1095) pocket knives are what all others compare to.
They’ll rust. But they take a wicked edge easily and hold it for more time than the average user needs to cut something.
Years ago maybe tape was all our fathers needed to cut, or open an envelope, and if they needed to cut card board they reached for a box cutter.
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Our fathers used an Arkansas oil stone, one per lifetime, to whet their pocket knives.
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Once you try a Diamond sharpener the Arkansas stones sleep in the tool box.
Still have mine as well.That exact knife in the top photo ... the Old Timer "stockman" (which I guess Schrade called a "middleman"?) ... was my first real knife. My dad bought it for me as a kid.
It's gone now. I don't know what happened to it. I remember having it at least through my teenage years.
I regret that.