Look, if I had a nickel for every knife Iāve got all covered in gears, Iād have two nickels.
So hereās the other one. This is the āDevilFish T20315,ā and with a name like that you know itās got to be good.
Iāve actually had my eye on this ā well, not precisely this by name ā for a little while. I dug this hole for myself by apparently deciding Iām like the stupid cutlery equivalent of Civvie 11 now, or something, and this whole thing has gotten so out of hand lately that I damn near give myself whiplash every time Iām scrolling through the internet and I catch a glimpse of another whack-ass shitty Chinese knife. I just have to page back and stare at it, like the broke kid pressing his face against the shop window at the candy store. Itās some kind of Pavlovian complex now.
Iāve been flicking through and honing my apparently encyclopedic knowledge of the Top Quest catalog, you know, as you do, and Iāve passed by this knife multiple times. You see, this is actually a Top Quest knife. The āDevilFishā moniker is just some more of that Amazon fuckery, you know, where everything has to be sold under some kind of registered trademark and it doesnāt matter if itās nonsense because all Amazon cares about is being able to pretend everything on there is a ābrandā and isnāt just drop Chinese shipped garbage?
So that whole grift actually works out pretty great for me for once, because Top Quest wonāt sell you a single knife. Theyāre a distributor who wants to sell a whole shitload of pieces to a reseller and if youāre just small potatoes like me as far as theyāre concerned you can just fuck off. Their web site wonāt even tell you how much these things are supposed to cost.
But I figured out the other week that I could buy just one of these from Jeff Bezosā Fun Time Candyland and I probably overpaid for it. It was still only $15.
Itās obviously the same knife. Itās right there on page 38 of the catalog if you want to check it out.
So the T20315 has this wholeā¦ aestheticā¦ going on. And I know what youāre thinking. Yeah, the gears on the back side where the clip is are fake and theyāre just cast into the handle.
Hereās the money shot. I know itās what you kids came here to see.
The gears around the pivot arenāt fake, and they turn when you open the blade.
Of course this doesnāt serve any purpose. Itās just there to look cool. The blade is just mounted on a splined shaft and it turns the big gear in the middle, which in turn drives the little one. Thereās a flipper heel on the back but itās kind of a red herring. The action is extremely draggy and flicking the knife open with the flipper is completely out of the question. Thereās a cutout in the blade in place of a thumb stud for you to open it the traditional way, and with a bit of practice it is indeed openable one handed via that avenue.
You can also flip it open if you give it an unwisely brisk snap of the wrist when you hit the flipper or, if youāre feeling super frisky, you can open it easily by doing it backwards ā grab the spine of the blade, and flick the handle out. Donāt come crying to me if you flub your DEX save when you try it, though.
The T20315 is a frame locker, and that as we all know tends to come with a hilarious centering job on a cheap novelty knife like this. At the very least the blade doesnāt contact any part of the handle nor can you entice it to do so, which is nice. But itās still pretty out of whack. Itās solid once you have it locked open, though.
This thing is all steel. No fancy titanium, aluminum, or even inlaid Chinese mystery wood. Thus despite its skeletonized design itās pretty dense: 107.3 grams or 3.78 ounces altogether. The blurb calls it ā7.5ā inches, but by my measure itās actually 7-5/8. So you get a whole extra 0.125" for your money. The blade is a drop pointed affair thatās 3-3/16" long if youāre measuring the usable part, and rather less if you measure from the forwardmost tip of the rather rakishly angled handle, or a touch more if you want to measure from the center of the pivot. The blade is precisely 0.110" thick at the spine which I think weāve become quite accustomed to seeing by now.
The handles are probably some kind of sintered material casting. Theyāre steel, and a magnet sticks to them, but there are telltale mold release marks on the back sides. I think theyāve been tumbled, though, or possibly bead blasted. The outer surfaces are very consistent and feel pretty nice.
Despite all of its design tomfoolery the T20315 manages not to be cartoonishly thick. Itās only 0.496" including the thickness of the gears. It includes a nonreversible pocket clip that carries the knife tip down, and against all logic actually feels pretty good and draws cleanly. The clip is on the side opposite the gears so they wonāt snag on your pocket fabric, either.
I was going to take this apart, but, well. I canāt. The screw head on the little gear arrived pre-stripped from the factory, and I can see just by looking at it that the blade is press fit onto its shaft so I can only imagine this will be an exercise in frustration. Any disassembly would thus surely be destructive. Andā¦
The Inevitable Conclusion
ā¦Despite the T20315ās shortcomings ā not least of which being, once again, a complete lack of a memorable name ā I actually kind of like it. So I think Iāll leave it right where it is, i.e. un-destroyed.
The gears of mediocrity may grind slowly, but they grind exceeding fine.
Thank you for bringing another of these gems to my attention. And for writing the great review. Otherwise my cupboards would be filling up these things.
Did you format something differently, like lower res pics? Every previous post of yours scrolled really choppy. And yours is the only post that ever does it. This one is like butter.
Choppy or not, I look forward to your posts each week.