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Re: Muk Love [Re: banana-clip] #273724 04/11/09 02:50 PM
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tyger75 Offline
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Good review. I think it eloquently reflects the love and admiration we all have for the work that Dan puts into these blades for our enjoyment.


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Re: Muk Love [Re: tyger75] #273725 04/11/09 03:13 PM
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el clintor Offline
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Good review. I think it eloquently reflects the love and admiration we all have for the work that Dan puts into these blades for our enjoyment.
+1 <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/thumbup.gif" alt="" />


JYD #72 "Long live the brotherhood of the Yard!"
Re: Muk Love [Re: el clintor] #273726 04/28/09 11:49 PM
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There has been a bit of conversation going around regarding the mudder grips, and I'd like to weigh in with my own small assertion that these are not just good grips, not even merely great grips, but truly superior grips. The more time I spend with them, the more confidence I feel when I say "These are the best I've ever seen." I don't know if perhaps someone out there has developed something to surpass them. All I'm saying is that if they did, I have yet to experience (or even hear about) anything that isn't promptly dusted by the mudders. By way of example, I'd like to pose a question: there are many high end grips of which many on these forums are aware, and have heard at least some small nagging complaint about. But has anyone heard a single complaint about the Scrap Yard mudder? Not only haven't I been able to find or read about a single complaint, but I can personally vouch for why this is. SY mudders are, from what I can tell, as good as it currently gets. I know that's a bold statement, but I'm putting it out there. So I'm opening this up to discussion. Does anything compare? If so, I'd certainly like to know about it, and I'd like to hear your thoughts on the subject. I'm not utterly convinced they're impossible to surpass, I'm only saying that if this has been done, I'll be damned if I know about it.

Re: Muk Love [Re: Midtown] #273727 04/28/09 11:54 PM
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I think the almost universal love for the SS4 was based as much on the mudder grip as the INFI blade. I like all my mudder handled scrappers. You are right, it is a most ergonomic handle.


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Re: Muk Love [Re: Horn Dog] #273728 04/29/09 12:00 AM
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Wiggitty Offline
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The mudders are the most comfortable handles i own.


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Re: Muk Love [Re: Wiggitty] #273729 04/29/09 12:29 AM
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Tikigod Offline
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I skipped the bird dog the first time around and the main reason I am tempted to get one is because it has a mudder grip.


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Re: Muk Love [Re: Tikigod] #273730 04/29/09 12:32 AM
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gRat Offline
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What about where the handle mates up with the blade? Any issues with keeping that area clean, especially during food prep? Seems like material maybe able to get in there???

Re: Muk Love [Re: gRat] #273731 04/29/09 01:00 AM
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I have not noticed a gap on mine that I would worry about. I have cut up raw chickens with it, and was able to wash it with no issues (at least to my knowledge)


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Re: Muk Love [Re: Tikigod] #273732 04/29/09 01:15 AM
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james_bond Offline
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It is funny often a company will say "our handel is the most comfortable, it was computed to be egronomicly superior blah blah blah...."
meanwhile the Scrapyard mudders just are.


JYD #25 Clinging to my Guns, Religion, and Scrapyards.
Re: Muk Love [Re: Midtown] #273733 04/29/09 01:33 AM
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Dumpster Dan Offline
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okay I just have to say, I really liked the Muk from the first time I saw it, and when I received it I was pleasantly surprised at the degree to which it exceeded my expectations, but now after only owning it for a short while I have to tell you folks that it just keeps ascending in my estimation. I like it more and more every time I pick it up (and I will admit to you that I pick it up, more often than not, when I don't even need it for anything - it just feels that good in the hand).

What a great knife!

It's no wonder a small cult has evolved around the Mudder grip, because it really is exceptional. I hope whomever designed that grip is rolling around right now in a big pile of money and Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, because that grip right there is a gift to humankind on par with sliced bread, Post-It Notes, the internet and three bean chili. Aye caramba, muy caliente! They should use Mudder grips on everything that has a handle and a lot of things that don't. If my suitcase had that grip I would carry it when it was empty and I wasn't going anywhere.

And the blade shape? You can see why it's so timeless, and appreciate the level to which they've taken it at Scrap Yard. Like the Harley v-twin and the bathtub Porsche, great design gets tweaks now and again but persists in recognizable form because it works so well and looks good doing it - and the people responsible for elevating a classic carry a heavy burden indeed. Make an ugly or useless thing out of a classic and you'll never be forgiven. Kick a classic up a notch and you'll never be forgotten.

Nothing but good things to say about this subtle, surprising, extremely satisfying knife. It's my first from Scrap Yard and already one of my fast favorites. I hate, hate, hate to rub it in, but if you didn't get in on this LE you're probably wishing you had. Some may consider this sort of faintly gloating statement extremely juvenile and immature, though to them I say: "Neener, neener, neeeeener, I got a Muk and you diiiidn't, don't you wish you haaaaad one" hahahaha <img src="/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

ONE SMALL THING, and this is the king hell alpha dog of mixed criticisms, that 154CM does NOT want to leave the knife, and if you're used to being able to raise a decent edge on a ball bearing in ten minutes with some 400 grit and a hard arkansas, get ready for the tennis elbow this steel is about to give you. The factory edge is entirely adequate to be sure, but if you're like me and you can't rest easy until you have a shimmering polish you can't touch with your skin, get ready to take your vitamins and get a workout. My stones look like soap dishes by the time this Muk is through with them. I take both consolation and satisfaction from the knowledge that the edge it takes is keen beyond keenness. The Muk's 154CM rewards patience and persistence with an edge that can separate water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen and shave the stink off a monkey. Okay maybe not quite that sharp, but sharp enough to make you say "daaaaaaamn".


Thank you for the kind words and well written review

I am humbled

Dan

Re: Muk Love [Re: Dumpster Dan] #273734 04/30/09 02:18 AM
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From what I've been reading, it seems I'm not the only one to find the Muk surprisingly excellent. Which is not to say that I didn't expect excellence, just not as excellent, if that makes sense. From the photo and the specs you know you're getting a great knife, but when it hits your hand and you use it for a while, you catch yourself saying, pardon my language, holy SH!T, I mean, [censored], this is a great knife! Substantial but not heavy, classic but advanced, can I get a witness when I say extremely, pace-settingly comfortable? Resilient, useful, and okay ladies and gents PRETEND you don't care it's an envy magnet - people who don't know knives say "Heyyyy, what's that?"

And people who DO know knives say "Heyyyyy, what's that?"

If I could go back in a time machine and rename this thread, I wouldn't. This has to go on my desert-island list.

- hatchet, check

- flint, check

- first aid kit, check

- encyclopedia, check

- whiskey, check (you know, medicinal purposes)

- Muk, check

I guess that about covers it.

Re: Muk Love [Re: Midtown] #273735 05/02/09 08:06 PM
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Tikigod Offline
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I am actually surprised there is not more Muk love... I think anyone that skipped it would be surprised how much they liked it if they held one...


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