Both are surprisingly useful. It’s a shame my Alox SAK doesn’t have them. An oversight by Victorinox.oh - i had one of those in the 70's i think - it had a tooth pick and tweezers , if i remember correctly
Both are surprisingly useful. It’s a shame my Alox SAK doesn’t have them. An oversight by Victorinox.oh - i had one of those in the 70's i think - it had a tooth pick and tweezers , if i remember correctly
Edwin Starr, surely?At home we have a small toolkit in the kitchen drawer but we regularly hire narrowboats and my Leatherman always comes along too. Small enough to shove in a pocket and useful for fixing bits of boat that have worked loose, undoing covers on torches, remote controls etc to replace batteries and the like.
PS I like the Frankie reference in the title @Pallet Fancier
Probably , i have a few
Leatherman
Stanley
other - cant remember
I do take then with me on holiday
1 is in the car all the time
And just purchased some E-bikes this week , so again will be with me on routes
i have used a few times
Legally as the Blades all lock on mine, I'm not sure i'm allowed to carry a locking knife
Same here regarding SAK & Leatherman. I have a couple of filleting knives, a Bowie, & a VERY large French folding knife, 11" long folded!, not to mention a 1917 303 bayonet.I dislike SAKs as I never found that would hold its edge, and found most of the accoutrements useless. I was bought a Leatherman but I have no idea where it is now as I don't recall ever using it. I do however carry a very good quality illegal lock knife.
Edwin Starr, surely?
Any bladed article with a locking blade, fixed blade or blade over 75mm is illegal to carry without good reason, a multi tool is no exception. The only knife you can legally carry without a good reason is a folding pocket knife without a blade lock with a blade length of 75mm or less (SAK is fine).you can't use most of the blades if they don't lock in as many are double sided but it's classed as a Multi tool not a knife
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