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  2. Buck Knives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_Knives

    The Buck Model 110 Folding Hunter Buck 110 LT (FRN handle) On April 18, 1963, two years after incorporating, the Buck board of directors authorized development of a new folding utility and hunting knife. [1] The new design featured a sturdy locking mechanism and a substantial clip point blade suitable for butchering and skinning large game. [1]

  3. Fighting knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fighting_knife

    Among these is Buck Knives' Model 110 Folding Hunter, a lockback folding knife. Originally marketed as a hunting knife, the Model 110 saw use with military and naval personnel as a utility or emergency knife for cutting rope, strapping, harnesses, rigging, and a variety of other tasks. Custom knife makers began making similar knives intended ...

  4. Utility knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility_knife

    The development of stronger locking blade mechanisms for folding knives—as with the Spanish navaja, the Opinel, and the Buck 110 Folding Hunter [citation needed] —significantly increased the utility of such knives when employed for heavy-duty tasks such as preparing game or cutting through dense or tough materials.

  5. Pocketknife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocketknife

    Companies such as Buck Knives, Camillus, Case, and Gerber, created a wide range of products with locks of various types. The most popular form, the lockback knife, was popularized by Buck Knives in the 1960s, so much that the eponymous term "buck knife" was used to refer to lockback knives that were not manufactured by Buck.

  6. List of blade materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_blade_materials

    The once ubiquitous American Buck Model 110 Folding Hunter was made of 440C before 1981. [citation needed] Böhler n695 is equivalent to 440C. [citation needed] Knife blades specified as being "440" can typically be assumed to be the lower-hardness 440A grade. [citation needed] AUS series

  7. Gravity knife - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity_knife

    Other knives commonly mistaken for gravity knives include the automatic OTF knife, the switchblade and the butterfly knives (or balisong), the sliding knife, penny knife, and occasionally even common folding hunting knives such as the Buck 110 Folding Hunter. [8]