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What's with the cut out blades on folders?

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The current fetish seems to be artistic cut outs along the spine of the blade just forward and above of the pivot and stop pin. WHY?
The amount of weight saving is minimal when you're talking about a 3.5 - 4.0 inch blade of substantial width and thickness, stainless steel liners, G10 or Micarta handle slabs, etc..
It weakens the blade by removing material at one of the highest stress points - just in front of where the blade meets the stop pin every time you open the blade.
While I appreciate the artistry of some of the knives I'm seeing, to me "form follows function" - an expensive, artistic broken blade is useless. A utilitarian, non-sexy, functioning blade is priceless - when you really need it....
But I'm kind of a rarity, I carry, and use, all the blades I own, on a daily basis. I don't own many folders, but the ones I do have held up in the long term, keep a reasonably good edge, and don't need a grinding wheel to sharpen....
Just my $0.02.
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48thRonin2
117
Nov 6, 2018
IMHO, this is a very artistic knife that has too little blade material between the thumb hole and the stop pin notch: https://www.massdrop.com/buy/massdrop-x-tashi-bharucha-prism But what do I know, I just carry and use my knives every day, and sometimes for (gasp!) prying purposes that put completely different torque vectors on the blade....
48thRonin2
117
Oct 24, 2018
Not talking about jimping.... Talking about this:
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That is really close to the pivot pin and stop pin - and angular cuts always weaken the steel as opposed to circlular cuts, like Spyderco uses. I just don't understand why I should pay big bucks for something that is artistically interesting but is more likely to break or crack than a solid blade of equal quality.
48thRonin2
117
Oct 26, 2018
Hey, maybe if you're good, Santa will bring you a CNC machine and a water jet cutter, along with a lifetime of Hitachi tool steel bar stock... LOL! Make you an offer... you make them, ship them to me, and I'll "test" them...
Kavik
5531
Oct 26, 2018
48thRonin2Lol i wish. First I need "Santa" to bring me a house, with a bit of land, so that i have room first to build a wood shop, then the machine shop would come after that...
D.Saint
1
Oct 24, 2018
I think it's called jimping? It's a textured part for your finger to sit on. It gives more blade control when doing fine tasks. To be honest, any decent blade shouldn't break there.
Kavik
5531
Oct 21, 2018
Examples? Many of what I'm picturing from your description make it a functional finger flick hole, similar to a Spyderco hole, but more interestingly shaped
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