Klein Tools 44004 Hawkbill. I was in the market for a mid-sized hawkbill that was not Chinese-made, affordable, plain-edge, a lockback or midlock, and of decent steel.
The Klein was 3.5" closed, just big enough to be useful; made in Japan, plain-edge, a midlock, and hollow ground AUS-8. Only $25-30 most places. Thus, all the boxes were checked. I normally don't bother with Amazon unless I need something in a hurry that I can't find in a local store. They had it as a "Warehouse Deal" for $20 which usually means return or damaged packaging. This was the latter. The front of the blister was badly scuffed, and had a hole in it. Knife was new and perfect. I kept hearing people complaining about a "thin blade". It's a little bit over 1/8 thick, which is not thin at all. The reasonable thickness and hollow grind make this knife an incredibly good slicer. Today, it's already made quick work of cardboard and weed eater string; while being sharp enough to be able to sharpen the ends of the string.
Even better, I've done some research, and found evidence that seems to suggest Klein contracted Moki to produce these knives. The Moki MK-K007 is IDENTICAL, except for being marked Moki and red. I am surprised at how they sell for so little, given most Moki are $70 or so at the cheapest, and Spyderco's cheapest Seki knife is the $40 Ladybug. And, Spyderco's closest model, the Dragonfly Salt is double the cost of this knife.