Pocketknives/Kitchen Knives/Fixed Blades
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That'd be rather awesome cause the (fake) replacements I'm looking at would cost me 30-40€ shipped… I'll contact them then... Thanks!..
So if anyone needs a replacement clip, let me know, I'll ship it to you for free.
https://www.knivesandtools.be/nl/pt/-spyderco-pocketclip-zilver-voor-c07-c08-c10-c11-c81.htm
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Ordered!.. Here's the procedure and prices in case anyone was wondering…
Hello,
Thank you for taking the time to email us with your clip question.
Please let us know which Native you have, if it is the one with the barrel screw I have listed the info below to replace that clip, if it is not, please attach a picture and we can assist you from there.
A new ClipKit for the Native Barrel screw is $6.95 (CLIP41bk)
Shipping and handling within the USA is $1.95 International is $5.00
To purchase a ClipKit for your knife you can call the Spyderco Factory Outlet, mail in a order with a check or money order, e-mail, or you can fax in a order. We accept Visa, Discover and Master Card.
If you prefer to order by e-mail or fax please provide us the following information:
- Item and quantity of item
- Full name as it appears on Credit Card
- Billing address for Credit Card
- Credit Card number (you can send half of it in two separate emails for security.)
- Expiration date
- CVC Security code
- Shipping address (if different from billing)
Anyone in the Outlet Store can help you with your order. Our store hours are Monday – Friday 9 am - 5 pm and Saturday 10 am - 5 pm Mountain Standard Time.
Kindest regards,
Kyle
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It's a big thing in the UK of course… Knife-related violence is off the scales these days... So it'd be sensible to ban 'm... However the effectiveness of such a ban would be questionable...
In Belgium it's very reasonable... You can't carry an auto-knife (switchblade, stiletto); you càn carry a pocket knife but it has to be work-related... Say: I'm working and carrying me Sebenza... Fine, as I'm using it whilst working... I'm out at the pub carrying same knife... Offense...
I, however, won't even attend a funeral without carrying one...
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I don't understand how banning automatic knives is reasonable. Why does the deployment mechanism matter in terms of public safety? Is it perceived danger to the wielder having the knife spin out of control and injure themselves or someone nearby? A thumb stud or flipper blade can be deployed just as quickly as a partially- or fully-spring assisted blade, and of course fixed blades are already deployed. I'm open to hearing a sound rationale for banning them; my only thought is that automatic opening is generally unnecessary and introduces potential points of failure, and a bad automatic design could deploy accidentally when carried, but those risks should be managed on a case-by-case basis. In the States, I believe the excessive regulation of these is out of ignorance, fear, and stereotypes like the greaser with a switchblade rather than being out of facts, evidence, and sound rationale.
I also don't think that it's anyone business how I use a knife unless I am threatening or harming someone. So "work-related" is also unreasonable: what if I want to open a personal package or whittle something on my own time? I don't think about all the ways I'm going to use a knife before carrying, I just know blades come in handy from time to time, like any other item in one's EDC.
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Yeah, @Seul , I was just taking the chance to attack Belgium
Our policies are similarly ridiculous.
Rant follows, just ignore me–I didn't know about UK knife law and I'm appalled re: the locking knife ban. That's monumentally stupid. Locking is a safety mechanism. I love my slipjoints, but they are not nearly as safe to the user as a locking blade. Meanwhile, I suppose it's perfectly legal to carry a straight razor (no lock, and bonus points, no point!!), which is far more dangerous to the holder or a victim than a simple Case lockback, for example. And I'd bet dollars to doughnuts that chavs stabbing folks in the street are more likely to use a kitchen knife than a Sebenza anyway.
I found the following on what as far as I can tell is not satire, from the Church that was founded because Henry VIII wanted to make it official with his side piece:
"We the undersigned are professionals and community leaders from across the UK who call on Government to see the sale of pointed domestic kitchen knives as a thing of the past," reads the not-a-parody open letter from the Diocese of Rochester, signed by church leaders, lawmakers, psychiatrists, academics, and the like. "Historically we needed a point on the end of our knife to pick up food because forks weren't invented. Now we only need the point to open packets when we can't be bothered to find the scissors."
Is this real life or an exercise in reductio ad aburdum by the knife lobby? I thought @DougNg was kidding…. A point is for puncturing things as the rest of the blade is for slicing, sawing, chopping, carving, etc. things. The likelihood of those "things" being human flesh is very low. The likelihood of those "things" being your fingers is higher without a lock.
Ridiculous.
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I’m trying my best to stay out of this but I can’t shut up
1. Bans are intellectually lazy and never address the actual problem
2. If bans worked then prisons wouldn’t have murders or need guards
3. If you elect a government that is willing to ban (pick a noun) then someday they will ban something you care about. -
@DougNg Preach Brother!
Canada’s current approach to anything scary, is to ban. It’s their way of making people feel safe from the realities of life. There are good people who follow the rules, and bad people who don’t. The people who get hurt by bans are often not the intended population and doesn’t address the population that are causing most of the problems.
I know there are more things in play than the yin/yang version of life with many different (societal, behavioural, mental) issues at play, but banning is a very lazy way to address those issues.
Just my $.02
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At least an argument can be made that guns are for killing. Knives are for all kinds of stuff. Assuming that a simple tool with many, many uses beyond harming people will be used for that one "edge" use adds another layer of ridiculous presumption.
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For those with a few tens of thousands to spare, Anthony Bourdain's chef knife, made by Bob Kramer out of meteorite damascus, is going to be auctioned off:
https://www.igavelauctions.com/auctions/property-from-the-collection-of-anthony-bourdain
Sold for over $300k…