I had to weigh myself with full winter gear in order to set the sag and suspensions settings on my quad and i was well over 300 pounds!
I would be willing to bet my SAR5 could take it. I have heard of a mora being abl to take a 200 pound man though.
Knives like the SAR5 ,DM's and especially the YKLE can probably be hammered into concrete and used like that. Another way they can be udes is as entry tools.
You can hammer them into a doorframe and put a cheater bar on it.
Everyone probably knows the story about the guy who cut himself out of an overturned 4X4 with a camp tramp. the only problem is it is hard to make a knife like this that is a good slicer and capable of delicate work as well.
The Busse kin have come closer than most anyone. The SS4 is closer to the cutting tool side while the YKCG is closer to the entry tool. The YKCG is very ggod at cutting for an entry tool and vice versa with the SS4.The flat ground Mutts are a little tougher at the cost of some cutting ability due to the thickness of the stock but the sabre ground DMCG is a much worse cutter and an even tougher entry tool but I think it is toughness it does not need. Any broken flat grind Mutts?
Comparing the SAR5 to the YKCG is interesting.
They are very similar knives.
The same stock thickness ,blade shape and close to the same size only the SAR5 is an inch bigger
The SAR5 seems to have a nifty convex grind for maximum strength rather than the flat grind of the YKCG.
The SAR5 has a better choil and a better handle for large hands.
There is also the INFI vs S7 steels.
The YKCG seems the better slicer though.
I will probably only keep one of these 2 because I am getting a lot pickier about which knives I keep. I would love a SAR5 Comp model. The knife would be perfect with the zero edge and no coating.