In reading over some early Gerber literature, I discover that the early model Zytel model LST knives were cryogenic quenched.
I have always thought the early model LSTs held a better edge than current models. I thought it was due to using a much better grade steel than the current LST use. Now I can see why part of the reason is the cryogenic treatment. Not many knife companies used this in knives back then. It really improves the edge holding ability.
One of the knife companies I have worked for was Boye Knives. They use the cryogenic treatment and it really helped. I know that latter model Buck Knives have this treatment and it helps their edge holding too.
Just something I learned today that I thought to pass along about Gerber LST knives.
Bryan+
Early Gerber LST had Cryogenic Treatment Blades!!
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Re: Early Gerber LST had Cryogenic Treatment Blades!!
I have a Magnum LST Jr. from the 1990s, and have noticed it holds an excellent edge. It's also a lot more ergonomic than the current LSTs. Sure wish they'd bring the Magnum and Magnum Jr. back. I think Gerber's too focused right now on Orient-made garbage with "trendy" names and features. These days, the introduction imported models seem to vastly outnumber American-made ones.
Re: Early Gerber LST had Cryogenic Treatment Blades!!
I have 2 LSTs from the early 80's, 2 more I bought in the 90's, one LST I bought about 5 years ago (smaller checkering) and two LST II's from the early 2000's and honestly they all hold and edge well but the the older 80's models due seem a little harder to sharpen.
Perception is Reality