If I were in your position, I'd sell it. The sebenza is a very nice knife, but if you really don't appreciate it you shouldn't spend $300 on it.
The sebenza in my opinion is the best production folder you can buy. Its fit and finish is second to none, it's one of the few knives where the manufacturer encourages you to take it apart, it has an outstanding warranty, and finally its simplicity is such that if the knife is well taken care of it should last forever.
That said, it's still at the end of the day just a knife. If you do not have a passion for knives the sebenza simply isn't worth it. Knives are designed to do exactly one thing, that is seperate matter. Any knife will do this, whether it costs $10 or $1000. Granted some knives may not do it for very long, or may fall apart. However you can get a knife for a lot less than $300 that should stand the test of time and do a good job at matter seperation.
Flashlights are very similar to knives in that they have a singular basic functionality. After everything is said and done,a $10 flashlight will illuminate your way to the bathroom at night or help you find the fuse box just as well as a $180 Arc4+. Generally speaking only flashaholics spend this much for flashlights, and only knifeaholics should buy sebenzas. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
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this_is_nascar said:
Well, my knife arrived today. I'm not sure what to say really. I'm glad I went with the small. The large would have been bigger than what I was looking for. Build quality appears to be excellent, it feels good in my hand, the opening/closing of the blade is nice and smooth and it just feels like a well made solid product.
All that being said, I beleive that I've discovered that I'm not really a "knife-person". I'm having those same thoughts that a non-flashaholic must have when I tell them I paid hundreds for a flashlight. I just don't see what makes this a $300 pocketknife. This is not meant to be offensive or anything, so please don't take it as such.
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