For everyone who sold their Benchmade Altitude...

The knife handle is uncomfortably thin (at least on the original) for using without wrapping it in paracord, and S90V is super hard to resharpen once it loses its edge.
 
The handle is fine, if you keep the knife properly sharpened.

However, S90V chips more than I like and my Altitude would get chips deep into the bevel, which would need bench stones and a good bit of time to clean up. My EDC Griptillian with an S90V blade never had that issue, so could have just been my sample.

As for replacement, currently I use a modified MKC Jackstone. I have a CRK Inyoni, which is a great boning knife, but notably inferior as a skinning knife to the Jackstone.

Personally, a Dixie Zipper would be my choice if buying today.
 
Why I sold the altitude. It was the heaviest skeleton knife. The handle was uncomfortable. It resold well since it was a benchmade.

I replaced it with argali knives and I have been super happy with them. The S35 is not bad to sharpen. I also bought 2 in magna cut to try out. I have 2 carbons and 2 seracs. I just send the 4 back into argali to resharpen. They are fast and responsive.
 
What did you end up replacing it with?

I see these for sale in the classifieds more than any other knife. What's the deal?
Day 6 dragonfly

I still have my altitude, just don’t use it much, but I reprofiled the edge and the orange cerakote is scratched up and ugly, so it would be hard to sell for an amount to be worth it, so I keep it and use it occasionally for cutting joints, cutting hide around the legs, cutting tarsal glands off, etc (the things that dull my primary knife)

I bought it in hopes that it would stay sharp through a whole elk, but it doesn’t, so I lost interest in it. The dragonfly is the only fixed blade knife I know of that will make it through a whole elk sharp, and that’s only because there is 2 blades in the one knife and it’s a great blade steel.

If it wasn’t for the dragonfly, I’d still use my tyto almost exclusively, I still very much appreciate what they are, but I think they are dangerous compared to a real knife… not sure exactly why, but it seems like people cut themselves with little replaceable blade knives at a much higher rate, and it’s usually pretty bad, and I’m alone a lot

15+ years of using them I haven’t cut myself bad, but I assume not push my luck
 
Should have added, I also replaced my Altitude with an MKC Jackstone, and a Kestrel Ovis Scalpel with short rounded blades (#22XT). Heavier to be sure, but far more user-friendly, and the full-handle scalpel takes the brunt of the skinning abuse.
 
Back
Top