






🔪 Elevate your EDC game with the sleek, reliable SENCUT Sachse – don’t get caught without it!
The SENCUT Sachse Pocket Knife features a premium satin-finished 9Cr18MoV blade paired with a durable brown Micarta handle for ergonomic comfort. Its ambidextrous button lock and reversible deep carry clip provide smooth, secure operation and easy portability. Designed for versatile everyday use, this foldable knife is ideal for outdoor activities, work, and daily tasks, making it a must-have tool for professionals and enthusiasts alike.




















| Best Sellers Rank | #87,035 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #252 in Camping Folding Knives |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 881 Reviews |
C**S
Great Value & Functionality with the SENCUT Sachse Pocket Folding Knife
I have three versions of the SENCUT Sachse Pocket Folding Knife - black & silver blades, the Micarta Handles & the Black G10 Handle Satin versions. Due to its great features and lower cost it is my most used EDC blade. I like the button release, gravity drop blade, ceramic ball bearings which ease opening, & overall feel of this affordable knife. Very good quality for what is is (a lower cost China-made everyday EDC knife). Great knife for fidgeting & opening with a flick of your wrist. Button release makes closing a breeze. Blade is a low to mid-level quality, sharp & functional. This is not a heavy duty tool like my more expensive folders, but for light weight duty it works just fine. Design is functional but not fancy, size is about medium for a folder and comfort is great for a folding knife. There are videos on taking this knife apart to clean and adjust it (don't crank down on the screws - tighten just a bit past hand tightening). ordered the T001C 6 piece titanium clip and titanium screws, (6PCS screws are divided into 3 packages, they are packaged in A, B, C which fits different knives). These are nice to give a lower profile clip.
R**F
Nicely balanced.
An impressive little knife. The scales are grippy and comfortable. Balance is very good and the button lock works a lot smoother than my Buck. It is a very lightweight knife, but it does feel good in the hand. Shame they went with this steel, but it will hold up as a light duty work knife...just gonna have to keep my sharpening stones handy. Fit and finish is really great, though. I would say it is worth the price. If Sencut put out the same knife in a better steel, I would grab it in a heartbeat.
M**O
What a great EDC knife!
This knife is amazing! I love everything about it. The scales are super ergonomic with no hot spots at all. The lock is fantastic and holds hard until you press the release. The blade is super sharp, and thin enough to be a slicer as well as a box opener. Great quality and construction. It opens like a dream and locks as soon as it hits the backstop. I can open it one handed, and both RH and LH work great. You will only need one hand to close it and the action is beautiful. You can feel the quality when you hold it, so this is my newest EDC to replace my tried and true Benchmade Bugout Ti, which I've used for years.
J**L
Exactly as you have heard
Awesome knife for a great price. This guy is so fidgety and I love it. First knife I learned to reverse flick. It's also very light in the pocket and is a nice sized slicey knife. Very sharp out of the box. Technical stuff to the best of my knowledge below... The 9cr18mov steel in this knife is comparable to, and also is the Chinese version of, 440c usa steel. It's a solid budget steel with good corrosion resistance and edge retention but, as such, it will be harder to sharpen. Hardness 58-60, pretty good for knives in the price range. AFAIK, both Micarta and G10 are excellent handle materials that last a long time. What to choose is going to be hugely personal preference so dont let anything i say sway you. However, as I understand, Micarta (most usually) is a linen based epoxy and G10 is a fiberglass resin. Both are extremely durable. Full disclosure I have not so much as even held Micarta in my hands and I admit it looks good but I have had G10 and I like it and it seems like for me it will hold up better and I was intrigued by the natural color as well. It's not going to be for everybody and that's fine. That was my preference. I'm not super technical on knives and that is the extent of it. I believe these are ball bearingg pivots and the action is really nice. The button lock does indeed stick a bit, as you may have heard, but it's really not a problem for me. Detent is enough I'm sure it won't open in my pocket yet it's easy enough to reverse flick it. I just feel like it's a really good deal and want to help people decide if this could be the knife for them. Thanks for reading.
V**.
Good value
So, this is my first 'button lock' folder. I had to see what they were about, mechanically. We do live in a golden age of pocketknife possibilities. My wants were 1: a button lock 2: a flipper action 3: almost any steel other than D2. This guy stood out with its profile. Handsome, and nicely proportioned. A drop point? a spear point? well, it IS pointy. Pointy is good. I picked the blacked-out with wood scales model. I haven't bought wood in years. Nostalgia. Well, this knife came flawless. I won't go through it point by point but everything looks excellent. The 'button' has good purchase on the blade back, my main concern. OK, it's Chinese steel, but an all-right steel. It's like 440 C. Hey, we're talking $ 45 bucks here. It opens by flipper or by studs, or via the old-fashioned way, just pull the blade out. Nice, it is an excellent little knife. If I lost it I would buy another one. It is no sexy, head-turning beauty like my Kizer Manganas but this is a knife that I won't be afraid to use in a rough situation. I believe that it stands a good chance of surviving the hot summer in my sweaty jeans pocket. No one has just one pair of shoes. You've got your everyday pair and your Sunday go-to-meeting shoes, and one can't have too many pocketknives. Update: Now having carried this little guy through most of the summer, my observations are thus- It is a fun little knife. It IS a little knife though. It is for little jobs. The handle scales offer a skinny grip. You will feel that the blade wants no part of being torqued left or right. Someone asked if the blade ever got a wobble, well, yes, one did develop. It is an easy fix, but being a knife from the budget seats you will need not one, but two torex-style screwdriver bits. One to hold the left side steady and the other to then turn tight on the right side. Most knives of this style in the $70 and up range come with some type of decorative pivot on the left side and only need one torex bit to adjust. It is still a nice little guy but there will be times when I carry something more robust.
D**T
Easily Best Bang For The Buck...
... and that's not to indicate a cheap feeling knife. The action was good when I got it, but I like to watch YT vids and work on knives for fun. So, I tune for optimum action. I disassembled it, applied some Nano-Oil 10w to the bearings and along the back of the blade where it rotates along the button lock. I have 8 knives, all costing more than this Sachse (pronounced Sack-See) by at least 4 times and this has the best action of any of them. And I have some really good action knives like the Hogue Deka Gen 2 and the ZT 0452CF, Benchmade 940-1. I can easily deploy the blade with any method, virtually effortlessly. I press the button lock and it just rocks with seemingly zero friction. Just swings front to back like nobody's business. Very fidgety. Blade has no play and is dead center. This REALLY is an impressive knife. There is some button stick, which seems to be par for the course. Even some Pro-Tech Malibus have that issue, Doesn't bother me, most comments say it wears in - we'll see. I have also noticed it is a bit more severe the harder you deploy i.e. - a hard thumb-stud flick. If you're considering this knife and like the profile just get it, you'll be impressed with what your money buys you. I might get another in green micarta/black blade as well, instead of a Civivi Conspirator. Lastly, for those that are unaware, they're both WE Knives subdivisions 1 WE, 2 Civivi, 3 Sencut.
J**H
Amazing action and perfectly sharp
Ease of opening is incredible with the smooth action. I love the smoothness of the micarta scales. It’s bigger than my previous Kershaw but I think it suites best. It’s a stunning looking knife and love the deep carry clip. It comes razor sharp and has held its edge with extended use. The 9cr is a great blade steel for the price and pairs well the the micarta material in the scales.
D**R
Smooth and pretty
Amazing knife right out of the box
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago