[AT] Was angle grinders, Now, Knives

Recentjester at aol.com Recentjester at aol.com
Wed Aug 10 17:36:19 PDT 2016


lets get way off center...how many shave with a straight razor.
 
 
In a message dated 8/10/2016 7:28:16 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
rotigel at me.com writes:

The best  daily carry I’ve ever come across is a Kershaw 1830. (See:  
https://smile.amazon.com/Kershaw-1830-Sweet-Pocket-Knife/dp/B00172A3DE/ref=sr_1_1?
ie=UTF8&qid=1470873626&sr=8-1&keywords=kershaw+1830  
<https://smile.amazon.com/Kershaw-1830-Sweet-Pocket-Knife/dp/B00172A3DE/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1470
873626&sr=8-1&keywords=kershaw+1830>)  For under 20 bucks it’s almost a 
throw away tool. The only reason I’m on my  2nd one (in about 20 years) is that 
I forgot it was in my pocket one time when  I was going through security at 
an airport. My Sunday go to church knife is a  William Henry (See:  
https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=William
+Henry+knifes  
<https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=William+Henry+knifes>)  that my wife bought me as an 
anniversary  
<https://www.google.com/search?q=anniversary&espv=2&biw=1382&bih=890&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiF-tCjirjOAhUCLSYKHSW9CssQsAQIJQ>
  present several years ago. Don’t think I’ve ever cut anything with it 
and hate  to even carry it in my pocket—but it sure is pretty!
Dave
PS, Interesting article on various types of lockbacks!

> On  Aug 10, 2016, at 7:23 AM, Stephen Offiler <soffiler at gmail.com>  wrote:
> 
> In knives, like most things. there's a ton of personal  preference, as 
well
> as wide variation in usage, and wide variation in  quality level.
> Personally I've had several knives with liner locks  (and maybe they were
> not particularly high quality, admittedly) but I  have learned to HATE 
liner
> locks.  Major selling point for the  Benchmade I mentioned earlier is the
> lock mechanism, which is called  an AXIS lock and is apparently 
proprietary
> to Benchmade.  This is  interesting:
> 
>  
http://everydaycarry.com/posts/8619/5-common-types-of-locking-knives-explained
>  
> SO
> 
> 
> On Tue, Aug 9, 2016 at 5:56 PM, Alan  Nadeau <ajnadeau1 at myfairpoint.net>
> wrote:
> 
>>  Back when I was doing a boatload of hydroseeding I was having to cut  
open
>> many bags of seed, fertilizer and the fiber mulch that went  into the 
slurry
>> mixer.  A lot of the time it had to be done  one-handed while hand #2 
held
>> the bag.  I settled on a  two-bladed folder from Kershaw, their
>> now-discontinued 4390, one  blade opens to either end.  It has liner 
locks
>> on
>>  both blades and the little thumb studs to roll the blade open with  one
>> hand.
>> To close it the thumb presses the lock out  of the way and then you just
>> curl
>> your finger(s)  around it to close it.  Being double ended it always 
comes
>>  out of the pocket with a blade in the right direction.
>>  
>> 
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From:  "Stephen Offiler" <soffiler at gmail.com>
>> To: "Antique tractor  email discussion group" 
<at at lists.antique-tractor.com
>>>  
>> Sent: Tuesday, August 09, 2016 8:17 AM
>> Subject: Re:  [AT] off topic some Angle Grinders
>> 
>> 
>>>  My EDC (everyday carry) knife is a Benchmade Griptilian:
>>>  
>>>  http://www.benchmade.com/griptilian-family.html
>>>  
>>> For me, the perfect knife.  Not cheap but to me it is  absolutely worth
>>> every single penny and then some.  The  blade is 154CM steel, holds an
>> edge
>>> very  well.  The handle is a lightweight, tough, grippy,  
glass-reinforced
>>> nylon.  The real selling feature is the  lock mechanism, after being 
very
>>> disappointed with the  mechanism on a couple of name-brand but cheaper
>>> knives.   It's a very easy one-hand-wrist-flick to open, smooth as silk,
>>>  and
>>> locks solid.  One-hand close as well; as long as you  develop the habit 
of
>>> bumping the back of the blade against  your leg or something while
>>> releasing
>>> the lock  with that one hand you're using.  Even the pocket clip is
>>>  superior
>>> to other knives I've had.  It's heavy and  springy enough that it holds
>> the
>>> knife fast to  pocket or belt with no worries of losing it.
>>> 
>>>  SO
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>  
>>> On Mon, Aug 8, 2016 at 9:54 PM, <pga2 at basicisp.net>  wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Sounds to me like you need a  lock-back knife. I have become partial to
>>>> mine for the  same reason that yours cut you. My Case knife did the 
same
>>>>  thing to me, just not as bad as yours did to you. I got a lock  back
>>>> assisted opening knife from the NRA as a gift and it  is now my 
everyday
>>>> carry knife. I also have two others,  but this one rides in my pocket
>>>> the nicest of the three. I  especially like the one hand opening. Makes
>>>> lots of things  easier, especially if you only have one hand free.
>>>> As for  the grinders, I treat them the same as a circular saw. I  have
>>>> a VERY healthy respect for both, and I've become very  fond of all 
parts
>>>> of both hands. As Ringo Starr once said  "I've 'ad a lot of fun with
>>>> that  fingah".
>>>> 
>>>> Phil un  TX
>>>> 
>>>> --- crbearden at copper.net  wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> From: Cecil Bearden  <crbearden at copper.net>
>>>> To: Antique tractor email  discussion group <
>>  at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>>>> Subject: Re: [AT] off  topic some Angle Grinders
>>>> Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2016 21:42:20  -0500
>>>> 
>>>> That thumb has had a rough time  the last 62 years.  In 77, I was
>>>> doctoring a horse  tied to a tree. The lead rope had a snap on it that
>>>> was  made like a lap link in a chain.  I dosed his ear with peroxide  
and
>>>> he set back against the tree.  I checked the rope  and when I did the
>>>> snap broke and the nylon lead rope  popped like a rubber band and the
>>>> snap hit my thumb and my  thumb literally exploded.  I spent 6 hours in
>>>> the  emergency room at Chickasha OK, and wore bandages on my thumb for 
 4
>>>> months.   The nail bed was destroyed and I had  nail growing out all 
over
>>>> the top of the  thumb.   In 78, a hand surgeon worked on it and  
literally
>>>> screwed it up.  He lapped tissue over dead  tissue and I spent the 
next 2
>>>> years digging pieces of nail  out of the scar.  My old timer MD
>>>> recommended a hand  surgeon and I had surgery again in 79.  I still 
have
>>>>  a wild piece of nail growing out,  but it does not fester up like  a
>>>> boil...  I also had a plantars wart growing out of  the fingerprint 
side
>>>> due to the first injury and  insufficient  cleaning at the ER in
>>>>  Chickasha.   A few years later,  the Index finger was cut to  the
>>>> ligament when my 3 blade old timer knife closed on me  when cutting the
>>>> top loose from a 5 gallon bucket.   The cut was bandaged by a retired 
vet
>>>> who is the closest  thing to a brother to me.  It healed nicely with no
>>>>  problems and you cannot see a scar without a magnifying glass.    I
>>>> decided the same type of medical attention was  appropriate on this
>>>> thumb.   I just changed the  bandage and it  looks great and I can move
>>>> the thumb  without pain.   The secret is a cortisone ear ointment  
called
>>>> Otomax.  It is the best antibiotic  ointment   to be found.  it is also
>>>> in the  veterinary pharmacy.  We had to cut out some of the tissue  on
>>>> each  side of the cut because the grinder disc was  hot and cauterized 
a
>>>> lot of grindings in the wound.   I had a 20 yr old bottle of Benzocaine
>>>> and I just dripped  it into the wound to stop the pain of the cutting.
>>>> Hold it  together with Steri-strips and adhesive tape.  I will get  a
>>>> Tetanus shot tomorrow when I visit my MD...    As you can see I can 
type
>>>> much better this evening, so the  proof is in the typing!!   I googled
>>>> angle  grinder injuries and really found some gory stuff!!
>>>> You  guys stay safe out there..  If we don't work on these old  
tractors,
>>>> they will be scrap..
>>>>  
>>>> Cecil in OKla
>>>> 
>>>>  
>>>> 
>>>> On 8/7/2016 6:06 PM, Chuck Bealke  wrote:
>>>>> Cecil,
>>>>>  
>>>>> Sure glad your cut was not worse. After cutting deep  into a finger
>> with
>>>> electric hedge shears a  while back, decided I'm better off with hand
>>>> shears. A  slight difference in the angle of that cut, and I'd now be
>>>>  missing too much of a finger that I'm quite fond of.
>>>>>  
>>>>> Chuck Bealke
>>>>>  Dallas
>>>>> 
>>>>>  
>>>>>> On Aug 7, 2016, at 4:47 PM, Cecil Bearden  <crbearden at copper.net>
>>>>>>  wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> It cold have  been worse, I bo ught some of those 7in discs to cut
>>  with
>>>>>> (0.045thickness),  from sportsman's  guide on clearance.  I was going
>>>>>>  to
>>>>>> try one of them, bu I would have had to find  the wrench to take the
>>>>>>  big
>>>>>> blade off.  In 55 years of working with  these things, it is the 
first
>>>>>> time one got  me.
>>>>>> cecil in okla
>>>>>  
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>>>>  
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