I took one apart myself, did half of three others with a buddy, and took most of an Alaskan moose apart with the same Buck 110 (440C steel) that my folks gave me for a high school graduation gift in '92.
I like to pack one knife that size, will likely take Dads old Buck 317 that he had the blades replaced on with D2 steel, on upcoming moose hunts. I take a small diamond stone and piece of leather for touch ups...I have those along for broadhead touch ups anyway. I also have a scalpel or havalon and a few extra blades for caping and turning the nose, lips, eyes and ears. If you aren't getting a head mounted no need for the scalpel. (Or if you dont know how to prep a cape).
I also have a small pocketknife, usually a stockman, on me for normal stuff. That stockman gets pulled into rough taxidermy duty though, like cutting around pedicals and heavy parts of caping.
I know of guys using knives of such hard steel or blade design that they need to send them back to the manufacturer for sharpening. Not me, I want a knife I can sharpen and touch up as needed, I'll take having to do that a couple times while butchering an elk or moose over having "super steel" that i cant sharpen with a diamond stone.
R