Stop the presses. Hold the phone, blow me down, and stone all the crows.
We can pack it all in. Completion is achieved. SOG ā you know, the Seal Pup and Trident people? Theyāve gone and done it. Theyāve invented a better and cheaper Bugout than the Benchmade Bugout, and apparently nobody noticed. This despite the latter apparently living rent free in every manufacturerās head. And ours too, come to think of it.

I labored the entire span of my teenage years believing that SOG stood for āSpecial Operations Gear.ā Apparently itās the Studies and Observations Group, and I would have called that an April Foolsā day prank if I hadnāt seen it written on the box. This is their Ultra XR, which is mildly saddled by having a name that makes it sound like some startupās virtual reality gizmo rather than the spiffing EDC knife that it is.

Oh, yeah. And NKD, by the way. As if my still having the box kicking around my desk didnāt tip you off. Now that Iāve finally gotten around to doing all the photography on this thing I can actually start carrying it without having to hyperventillate about getting pocket lint all over it.
The Ultra XR retails for about $90, so half the cost of a Bugout. And itās got a blade made of S35VN steel, so theoretically two notches better than the S30V that the base Bugout comes with. No, thereās no compromise there.

As we all know, Benchmadeās patent on the Axis lock expired in 2018. And as we all further know, this opened up the floodgates for every other knifemaker on Earth to nick the idea and run with it. This is well into becoming one of those exasperatingly repeated factlets, like did you know that Steve Buscemi was a firefighter who helped in the rescue efforts after 9/11, or that the US version of Super Mario Bros. 2 is actually a reworking of the Japanese game Doki Doki Panic? Did you know???
So while Axis-alike derivatives have been thick on the ground for the last several years, thereās been one curious blind spot in the market. If you want a compact Axis folder, up until now your only options have basically been to give Benchmade some money. You can either buy a Full Immunity or a Partial Immunity, or a Mini Bugout, or you can go and soak your head. Everything with a crossbar lock from everyone else is seemingly pathologically in the 3" and up category.
Well, not anymore. For lo, here is the Ultra XR with an Axis-alike lock on it which in its various guises SOG as branded as their āXR lock.ā

None of this tells you much about what the Ultra XRās big headline feature is. In fact, even looking at it lying on a table like this doesnāt do it justice.

This ought to give you a clue.
The Ultra XR is so thin, every cell phone reviewer in a five mile radius just got an inexplicable stiffie. Itās only 5.57mm thick (0.217") across its scales, not including the clip or screw heads. They donāt add much more, with it measuring up at 9.9mm across the button heads on the lock bar which is its widest point without the clip, or 0.390". Thanks to its single piece carbon fiber handle scales, it also only weighs 34.6 grams or 1.22 ounces ā Around two thirds what a Bugout does.
It seems that ought to be an easy enough goal to achieve; just build your knife to be uselessly tiny and you too can enjoy a bunch of minimalist numbers on your spec sheet. But the Ultra XR isnāt, and is still sized such that itās an actual Big Boy knife.

Itās not that much smaller than an OG Bugout. 6-1/8", by my measure, not including the little part of the clip that sticks out. Thatās roundabout the same size as the Mini variant of the Bugout, itself a knife that costs twice as much. And thatās just the pokey Grivory version, too. If you want a carbon fiber one to mix it with the Ultra XRās racecar materials cred, thatāll be a full $325, thank you.

Part of what makes the striking thinness achievable is carbon fiberās high rigidity for its weight and thickness. Thus the Ultra XR doesnāt require any liners beneath its scales, and theyāre constructed purely of thin slabs of carbon fiber. Itās not totally unsqueezably rock solid rigid, but itās darn impressive compared to a bog standard old Bugout:

SOG have gotten clever with the XR Lock, as well. It eschews the usual āomegaā hair springs that would normally reside in between the liners (or dinky plates, in the case of that-which-is-oft-named) and scales, the former obviously being something this thing hasnāt got. Instead, the lock bar is driven by a tiny torsion spring thatās wrapped around one of the body spacers.

You can see this easily in this highly uncouth and overexposed down-the-barrel shot that I took by shining a flashlight straight into the gap. Otherwise the lock works in the usual way, and is as ambidextrous as ever.

I took this thickness comparison shot but did not plan ahead to devise an appropriate segue to fit it into the narrative. Here it is anyway, for all that itās worth. The Ultra XR is visibly quite a bit thinner than either Benchmadeās old 535 or its little brother. Why the Ultra XR is thus not the undisputed darling of, say, all backpackers everywhere remains a mystery.

The Ultra XRās drop pointed blade is 2-5/8" long or about 67.9mm, and only 0.0805" or 2.05mm thick. Thereās no thumb stud, since obviously that would add to the thickness. Instead, thereās a slot cut into the spine of the blade for grip.

Of course you can still Axis Flick it open and shut all the livelong day. Nobody with an Axis locker uses the thumb studs for anything, regardless of how shiny and anodized they may or may not be.

The Ultra XR has a super deep carry clip that SOG suggest you could also use as a money clip. Despite appearances it is reversible. It sticks out the side more than double the thickness of the knife, but otherwise itās actually really nice. For once in history its not sprung so damn tightly you canāt get it to frigginā let go of your pants. The draw is nice and smooth and very easy. I imagine thatās largely due to the fact that the thing weighs so little overall that not much spring force is required to keep it clipped.
If you want to employ it as a keychain knife instead, thereās no real provision made for that. I suppose you could pass some cord through the mounting holes for the clip if you removed it, or use the holes intended for reversal on the opposite side. Youād probably have to use dental floss, though.

There are two sizes of screw head on the Ultra XR, T6 and T5 Torx. It seems that SOG used T5s on all the things they didnāt want you fucking with. The clip screws, for instance, are T6 and there are matching holes on both sides.

The Axis/XR/crossbar/whateveritis lock is a two piece design, and unscrews from one side. Itās got T6 heads in both sides, but like everything on this knife is severely threadlockered so you have to stick a driver in each side in order to get it out. In its slot you can see the prong from the little torsion spring that powers it.

The pivot screws are T6 as well and of course also threadlocked. Believe it or not there is an anti-rotation flat in the pivot screwās shank and a matching D shaped cutout machined into one of the scales. Itās anyoneās guess as to which side is which out of the box, though, since the heads are the same on either side. So tread lightly. The blade rides on what appear to be Nylon washers.
The two carbon fiber handle slabs are separated by four barrel spacers with screws in either side, one of which acts as the end stop pin for the blade. Theyāre also permanently threadlockered, and require a driver in each side to remove. Iām ashamed to admit that I only have one nice Wiha T5 driver bit despite owning oodles of the T6 ones (for obvious career-related reasons) and I snapped the tip off of my cheap T5 trying it. So, you wonāt get any photos of the back sides of the Ultra XRās handle scales. Iām sure youāll live. Thereās nothing exciting in there anyway, except the little torsion spring which I imagine has one leg slotted into a tiny hole drilled in one scale, and is probably prone to go āping!ā and get lost.

In case you forget what SOG actually stands for, theyāve helpfully laser engraved it in the back side of the blade. And speaking as the proud owner of a very nice laser engraver myself, I am now well versed in exactly what that kind of thing looks like. They used different power level or pulse width settings for the blade steel descriptor than they did for the branding. Cheeky devils.
I had a whole paragraph here speculating on what the blade was coated with to make it black, but I realize belatedly that itās all moot. The front of the box says right there that itās a titanium nitride coating, so undoubtedly applied via some manner of PVD process. I donāt normally go for a coated blade but this one at least looks very nice for now. Time will tell if it holds up acceptably for a change, or winds up annoying me and I laser it off.
What I can tell you is that this thing is exceptionally sharp out of the box. The bladeās thin geometry makes it slice through suitable materials very easily, although this will obviously never be a fighter or a bushcraft knife.
The Inevitable Conclusion
In case you couldnāt tell, Iām just smitten with the Ultra XR. As SOG themselves tell it, itās the perfect urban carry or polite company EDC knife. Itās short enough to be within the legal length limit practically everywhere, is made of a nice steel, and has a build quality that canāt be criticized. It also weighs practically nothing and rides in your pocket so discreetly that, the marketing department actually being truthful for once, you may genuinely forget that itās there.

It doesnāt hurt that it looks cool as hell, too. Even non-knife people can tell as soon as they handle it that itās something special.
I say this a lot, and in fact I might have made it my lifeās secondary mission to find all the myriad ways to prove this, but as long as the Ultra XR exists thereās really no reason to spend the money for a Bugout. Like, ever. (My lifeās primary mission seems to have become to collect every balisong and screwball knife in the world.) Surely the big B has taken notice of this sort of thing, and all of the above probably has a lot to do with the rumors that the Bugout is finally slated to get a redesign for next year with purported aluminum handles plus a new thinner lock.
I think somebodyās running scared. Iām still not in a big rush to buy one, though, because now I have this.


Helicon rocks. It is bewildering that there are so few options for competent focus stacking out there.