Thank you Roland...
That's OK I didn't understand it.
Although I carry a Swiss, it's because I do back it up since a failure. I have a pic in my gallery
Last edited by Wise Old Owl; 01-31-2011 at 11:30.
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
That Gerber I received from my son is: Gerber Suspension.
"Something hidden. Go and find it. Go, and look behind the Ranges. Something lost behind the Ranges. Lost and waiting for you . . . Go!" (Rudyard Kipling)
From SunnyWalker, SOBO CDT hiker starting June 2014.
Please visit: SunnyWalker.Net
To me, a car is a car. I have a Taurus wagon I paid 1K for a few years ago. I have had no issues with it, besides regular maintenance. I would also prefer to buy a Timex, I can spend the money saved on something else. A BMW is a status symbol, nothing more. If a car gets you from one place to another, without breaking down, then it is about all you need.
As for the swiss knife comment, I have made plenty of fuzz sticks, ect with mine, with no issues. I agree about carrying a sharpener, I have a small diamond rod on the biner with my knife, stainless dulls fast, it is a quality of the metal, not the knife.
Well to be honest I went back and looked up the swiss knives on the hardness scales and discovered they "Claim" the same level of hardness as other top quality of knives. So apart from the small support pin that can break, and how quickly they dull, they are good for what they were originally designed for... to pull apart and reassemble guns. So I am going to look over the Leatherman's again, and try out a few.... And donate my swiss to my son. In short it doesn't matter anymore....
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
Like I said, the dulling quickly thing is a property of stainless blades, not just the swiss army knives. You aren't going to be able to baton with one, of course it will break. You gotta use your equipment within its design parameters. If the pin breaks, I would just replace it with a small machine screw, bolt, and some loctite anyways.
What about a utili key? Only 0.5oz has knife and bottle opener (and some other stuff). I have heard it can even be used as a pan holder if you don't mind the dent it will make in the pot.
http://www.amazon.com/Swiss-Tech-UKC...ords=utili-key
Stephen
The Gerber ultralight LST weights .6 oz (weight of 6 razor blades). I've had the "heavy" version, and it is a nice knife. Has a 2 inch blade.
Die Zombie Thread...DIE!!
It was interesting to see what I was thinking about in 2010.
I'm with you on this one. why would you go into the woods with out a knife? I work in an office and wouldn't think of leaving the house without one I believe there are 3 things every man (or woman) should always have on their person: a flashlight, a bandana and a knife. without these things one is unprepared! If it were me I'd go for the basic Swiss army deals with a thin blade for slicing food and some decent scissors. Some folks like to have the multitool for the pliers, myself I don't think they are worth the weight.
The best journeys answer questions that in the beginning you didn't even know to ask.
Many lightweight hikers think that knives/multi-tools are extra weight. The guy that wrote the AWOL guide stated something that made a lot of sense to me. He thinks scissors are more practical for most tasks requiring cutting rather than knives while on the trail. He carries the Leatherman Micra which is first scissors and second a knife, among other things. I like this philosophy for AT style hikes. I bought one for long trail hiking. 1.8 ounces with an eyelet to place a lanyard and/or small biner into. The Leatherman Squirt (discontinued) is a little better because the tools in the handle are on the outside rather than in the middle which requires opening the tool to access them.
I prefer the classic Swiss knife because of the siccors.