So an awesome fellow dog hooked me up with a proxy at the Easton show, and I was able to add to my small but growing Bama Clay collection. These two new ones make four total.
Jerry has very recently modified his Bama Clay coating - the old one was smooth, but the new one is rough like sandpaper. I'm honestly not a fan of the change. The old Bama was a very practical coating while also looking good, but the new coating seems like it will negatively impact cutting performance, and that's especially bad on small slicers like these.
I still dig these knives, and once I've used them enough to wear the finish down to a smoother one, they will probably grow on me even more. But "filing your nails" on these blades definitely sounds about right. They are the roughest knife finish I have ever seen.
The new guys: MS and AD, both about .180 thick.
![[Linked Image from farm3.static.flickr.com]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2729/4118075379_542490d58c_o.jpg)
The whole family - NMSFNO and FSH are both the old style bama clay finish, which I like a lot better.
![[Linked Image from farm3.static.flickr.com]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2659/4118845030_480ff9f0bd_o.jpg)
Spine shot - .275, .245, .180, .180
![[Linked Image from farm3.static.flickr.com]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2708/4118845152_06b19b1bd2_o.jpg)
A closeup - notice how the AD and MS don't reflect much light, while the FSH has more glare on it.
![[Linked Image from farm3.static.flickr.com]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2526/4118075763_f4655076f7_o.jpg)
Another closeup both are textured but the MS is much rougher, to the point where I think it will negatively affect slicing.
![[Linked Image from farm3.static.flickr.com]](http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2678/4118075891_a311c55b88_o.jpg)