I agree that the 300 Series is kind of an afterthought to them nowadays, it seems that fighting knives, factory customs, hunters, and as you call them "flip knives" are more marketable, (and probably cheaper to manufacture). I also haven't seen any , (or not many), alternate handle materials being offered in the series any more either. Too bad. I am of the opinion also that the knives of the series made in Idaho are of lesser quality, especially fit & finish, as compared to San Diego made knives, and neither approaches the quality attained by Camillus. Again, too bad.300Bucks wrote:Sounds like you would be a good friend to have.
Sounds like you are prepping as best as possible also. Keep up the good work. As we have said in the past you guys with collection fever have a tougher road now with more people with more computer info access. When I started they were still just "pocket knives".
I am concerned that the 300 series is not in any Buck Co. spotlight, sort of just an after-thought. Seems like modern flippers and survival knives have taken over the minds of company designers. If I had won the lottery I was going to order a couple thousand jigged bone 300s and sell them off to show folks that some people want a old style pocket knife. But I only had one number......
300
I got in before prices went through the roof, I think I paid $8 for my #307, and got my #301 for around $10, my #303 for less, but even in the last year they have gone up and up in actual selling price. The most I paid for most knives I have of the series, (other than the SFO's), was around $20, so I think I did pretty good. The #315 & #321 cost in the mid $30's, and most of those go well above $60 or more lately. It would cost twice as much to put this collection together now. Speaking of SFO's, the #322 Congress I got several months ago cost me $40, and I thought that was high at the time. I saw the same knife go for over $70 just last week, so that is a good example of how the prices are actively climbing daily.
I may not be a traditional person, but I really appreciate traditional knives. Those modern flippy things look like something an angst ridden teenage boy with inferiority issues would be attracted to...I just don't get it!