The topic of carry knives comes up with reasonable regularity and there is a reason for that. Of all the tools and implements I own, I can honestly say that the basic EDC folding knife is the one I use the most. By far.
I have a ton of knives and I cycle through them regularly. None are perfect, so I am always looking for the next best thing.
A little while back, I stumbled onto a Kickstarter knife project that looked to be very intelligently designed. It was a smallish knife with an efficient blade shape made out of spectacularly nice 4V steel. That would have been enough, but the handle construction is truly innovative. They used 17-4 PH stainless steel and some clever machining to make a knife with very few components, yet a sophisticated blade lock.
On top of that, and that was a feature that really won me over, the carry clip design is smart. Carry clip is a weak point of most EDC folding knives and, as they break, I regularly end up replacing them with similarly crappy ones.
When I was looking at that Kickstarter campaign, I remember thinking that this is the first time I see a carry clip design and think to myself: "this is not blindingly stupid; not even a little bit".
It was not cheap, but I have paid more for knives in the past, so I backed the campaign.
If you have ever backed a Kickstarter campaign, you know that once you pledge, you get a few e-mails about the project and the people behind it.
Once I get those e-mails, a light bulb goes off in my head: I know these guys!
The two guys behind BP Knives used to work at Q and at a few other places prior to that. One is an industrial designed and the other is a mechanical engineer. I am well familiar with their work and I know they are really competent. With all that, I have avoided talking about their first knife design until now. Knowing what I know about them, I was pretty confident it would be good, but I wanted to see it first.
Now, we are getting close to the knives shipping and, during my last trip to the North East, I stopped by their shop and took a careful look at the first batch of parts for the knives. They were not yet fully finished, but the pieces were there and I could get a good feel of how the knife sits in the hand, how secure the pocket clip is and how one handed opening works.
I have really high hopes for it. Small knives are seldom confidence inspiring, but this one was.
We also talked a little bit about future designs they are considering, so I am pretty bullish on their company.
The final finished knives should start shipping pretty soon. I'll let you know as soon as I have one in my hands.
https://bpknives.com/mcqueen/