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Eschew Obfuscation |
Glad it turned up. My son has *lost* and then found his Benchmade more times than I can count. I love my Benchmade Barrage, but worry about losing it and so end up leaving it home rather than putting it in my pocket. _____________________________________________________________________ “One of the common failings among honorable people is a failure to appreciate how thoroughly dishonorable some other people can be, and how dangerous it is to trust them.” – Thomas Sowell | |||
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Spectemur Agendo |
Glad you found it before you bought another. My daughter has lost one knife, a CRKT My Tighe. She replaced it with a Leek which she likes better anyway. SIGforum's triple minority "It can't rain all the time." - Eric Draven | |||
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His Royal Hiney |
I go the other way. I buy more expensive items and I make sure I don't lose them. I still have my first Montblanc pen I bought over 25 years ago. "It did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being questioned by life – daily and hourly. Our answer must consist not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual." Viktor Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning, 1946. | |||
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Go ahead punk, make my day |
Part of the reason I’ve stuck with Emerson - their pocket clips are tight like a bank vault. | |||
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Member |
Been lucky I guess, I have never lost a wallet or a set of keys or a pocket knife, but I have never owned an expensive pocket either. I beat the crap out of my knives and have broken a blade on occasion but if the clip on my knife is not tight enough I just remove it and bend it a little and reinstall it. Collecting dust. | |||
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Power is nothing without control |
Can’t say I really loose all that many knives. Well, not for long anyway. Sure they wander off every once in a while, but I usually find them pretty quick. I think part of that is that my favorite knife is the Benchmade 940 and it ain’t cheap to replace. The idea of dropping another $200 because I didn’t look hard enough has been good motivation to find my knife when it does wander off! I’ve gone through a variety of knives over the years through wear, breakage, or just plain finding something better, but I almost never outright loose them. My wife, however loses enough for both of us! I think her record was getting a brand new knife from me as a gift and losing it within three days!...and she loses them good. It’s like she keeps a black hole in her pocket. - Bret | |||
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Member |
You'll find the Leek as soon as you buy/order a new one. I have three Kershaw Grid knives because I keep losing one and as soon as I acquire a new one I find the old one. Last time it happened my wife and I tore the house and car apart looking for it while laughing and swearing we'd find it when I bought a new one. Finally, on Sunday night (after searching for three days) I broke down and ordered a new one off of Amazon and fifteen minutes later I found the original clipped to my laptop bag because the shoulder strap had somehow slipped under the pocket clip. I decided not to cancel the order with Amazon fearing that I would immediately lose my newly located knife due to some twisted karma. Edi: I missed your follow-up post about finding the missing Leek. Glad you found it. Laughing in the face of danger is all well and good until danger laughs back. | |||
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eh-TEE-oh-clez |
1) Buy an expensive knife. You'll stop losing it. Same with expensive pens, flashlights, and sunglasses. 2) Adjust the pocket clip as part of regular maintenance. I check/strop/ceramic rod the edge, wipe down the blade (rubbing alcohol), and swab out the inside each morning after selecting my knife for the day. If the clip is loose, I adjust it. I also wipe down my phone with a rag and rubbing alcohol. 3) Develop systems. Certain things live in certain places. Knife in the pocket, or on the dresser. If you hand the knife to a person, hover over them until you get it back. If the knife sits in the same spot every day, you also stop bumping into things with it. | |||
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Member |
That's the truth, I tell my customers my CRKT's's for sale have a lifetime warranty..... if you could only keep it for your lifetime! I've lost one the very first day I carried it! _________________________ | |||
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