From Wiki - a serrated blade is a type of blade used on saws and on some knives or scissors. It is also known as a dentated, sawtooth, or toothed blade.
Regardless of what Wiki says, it is misleading to refer to a saw blade as a serrated blade. In the knife and multi tool community, a SERRATED knife edge is for cutting, like a plain edge is, only it has a “scalloped” or “toothed” edge for cutting fibrous things like rope or cordage. Rescue knives use this type of edge for cutting through seatbelts. SAW blades have a very different double row edge of teeth made specifically for SAWING through wood, branches, etc. That is a saw blade. You cannot CUT fibrous materials with a SAW blade, just like trying to “saw” through a branch with a serrated cutting edge would take a long time… Hope this helps.
From Wiki- a serrated blade is a type of blade used on saws and on some knives or scissors. It is also known as a dentated, sawtooth, or toothed blade.
From Wiki - a serrated blade is a type of blade used on saws and on some knives or scissors. It is also known as a dentated, sawtooth, or toothed blade.
From Wiki - a serrated blade is a type of blade used on saws and on some knives or scissors. It is also known as a dentated, sawtooth, or toothed blade.
The Bantam's combo tool is not only a bottle opener but a can opener, too. I think you didn't mention that. And there are quite a few colors out there, but some of them are not easy to find, and most have a shop logo of some kind because Vic requires it for many years now.
Ha ! I just commented on that older Pioneer video, then found this. Glad you saw the SAK light! Do you know how to use the cap remover as a wire stripper when it's half stopped at 90 degrees?
I personally like the size and robustness of the Pioneer-size better. And the reamer. The Bantam is incredibly thin indeed, but I also find the combo tool too thin. When I have to pry, I'm not really worried about my Pioneer - I would be much more careful with a Bantam.
Right now I have a red alox Cadet on my keys.. I saw that Knifecenter was offering a black alox Bantam and I was excited because I wanted to get a SAK with about the same blade length but substantially thinner on my keychain.. Bantam would have been perfect but no keyring unless I wanna get the plastic version.
You should try a combination of a knife+ pocket prybar. I used to be a SAK guy until I went into knife obsession. Now I have about 6 of victorinox knives but barely use them. I can't come to terms with the thought that I have to carry 2 knives on me at the same time.
@@09198384558 there are hundreds of them! Steel/titanium... Any shapes and forms. Personally I carry Leatherman Piranha at my backpack every day. But for pocket carry I would look for something slimmer.
Sak’s aren’t a bad. I only have one, I actually like some of the custom ones made with titanium scales. I actually like the customs ones that people replace the blade with a Spyderco blade. I think that it makes it easier to get the blade out versus a finger nail stud to get the blade out.
In the country I live, Bantam Alox is also very hard to find now even in its standard version (0.2300.26), and the 0.2301.26 version (Bantam Silver Alox with keyring) is impossible to find here. But I'm going to pick mine up today (standard silver), along with Pioneer. Don't really see the point in a Cadet when you have every nail related tool on a 58mm SwissLite on your keychain or Rambler in your small pocket...
he's clueless and missis the whole point of the half stop ,,,its so you lay the wire under he blade ,,twist it than run thru the stripper ,,,he also misses the fact of the can opener ...lot to be said about research before posting a video to youtube...also that is called a saw its not a "blade"