I'm not talking about minor nitpicky things. Seeing TWO Charges with liner locks that were DANGEROUSLY weak is not being nitpicky. Having bent drivers from the factory that would barely open/close is not nitpicky. That is a defect. Period.
why is it the charges seem to have the most problems? Almost all the charges I have had or have, has had some kind of a liner issue
Quote from: thebullfrog on February 15, 2010, 01:08:03 AMI'm not talking about minor nitpicky things. Seeing TWO Charges with liner locks that were DANGEROUSLY weak is not being nitpicky. Having bent drivers from the factory that would barely open/close is not nitpicky. That is a defect. Period.You seem to accepting that your personal experience cannot be held up as evidence of anything, but then persisting with the idea that this is evidence of something. You can see where the confusion lies for some of us no?A true story. I had a brand new Lexus delivered once, and on the second day of driving it the engine malfunction light started coming on and I had to get it picked up and drive a hire car for a few days This happened in 2001, the year that Lexus had achieved 1st, 2nd and 4th most reliable cars sold in Europe, with my model having zero reported breakdowns The other new Lexus I had was perfect.So, given all the evidence, were there quality problems with Lexus cars? Did 50% of Lexus cars have major defects?Of course they didn't. And consequently, I didn't go posting rubbish on internet forums about it and just accepted that I'd had a bit of crap luck. I'm happy to report that I've avoided that crap luck c. 160 times with Leatherman tools.Quote from: jim guy on February 15, 2010, 01:17:25 AMwhy is it the charges seem to have the most problems? Almost all the charges I have had or have, has had some kind of a liner issue A wild stab in the dark here, but maybe you've had more Charges?
Is this thread over yet?I thought we established that Leatherman is crap compared to the Swisstool, for every 10 tools Leatherman puts out, eight are greatly defective and poorly made, and soon that number of defective tools will reach ten out of ten.Okay? Does that about cover it?Can we move along now?
So if we want any semblance of an unbiased observation as to defect percentage by brand we should start compiling a list of all perceived failures in all tools owned or observed by Multitool.org members. We'll need a peer review board to assess whether or not the reported failures are due to material defect, design flaw or user abuse. Then we will need a statistician to give us a trend analysis so we can finally establish a solid metric of multitool quality by vendor.Or we can all just continue to voice our opinions regarding tool quality and have fun doing it. Yup that's the ticket.I love all my Leatherman tools, faults and all.
Quote from: Crouton on February 16, 2010, 03:39:49 AMSo if we want any semblance of an unbiased observation as to defect percentage by brand we should start compiling a list of all perceived failures in all tools owned or observed by Multitool.org members. We'll need a peer review board to assess whether or not the reported failures are due to material defect, design flaw or user abuse. Then we will need a statistician to give us a trend analysis so we can finally establish a solid metric of multitool quality by vendor.Or we can all just continue to voice our opinions regarding tool quality and have fun doing it. Yup that's the ticket.I love all my Leatherman tools, faults and all. I'll start assembling candidates for the Assessment Sub-Committee! Def
Well no. We could just state our opinions without making huge assumptions about things we don't have experience of. I think I'd prefer that "I have had really bad experience with LM quality, so I'm not buying any more" is a legitimate statement and opinion."I've had a few bad experiences with LM quality control, so this must be evidence of a major failing in the QC process and I fear that the company is going down the pan / world is going to end" is hysterical overreaction, and not a legitimate statement or opinion.ANY opinion posted on an Internet message forum is fair game for people to take apart though, surely?
Seeing TWO Charges with liner locks that were DANGEROUSLY weak is not being nitpicky.
(Image removed from quote.)insert random Pusskins with a SAK here.
Quote from: DaveK on February 16, 2010, 12:31:07 PMWell no. We could just state our opinions without making huge assumptions about things we don't have experience of. I think I'd prefer that "I have had really bad experience with LM quality, so I'm not buying any more" is a legitimate statement and opinion."I've had a few bad experiences with LM quality control, so this must be evidence of a major failing in the QC process and I fear that the company is going down the pan / world is going to end" is hysterical overreaction, and not a legitimate statement or opinion.ANY opinion posted on an Internet message forum is fair game for people to take apart though, surely?Let me first state that I am not only in agreement about your assertion that all posts are fair game, but also that people should be careful when making unsubstantiated claims based on infinitesimally sample groups.The funny thing about opinions though is that people make them based upon their sample group. So there are bound to be some outlandish claims from people who have had a bad run of luck.My hero Sherlock Holmes once said “From a drop of water a logician could infer the possibility of an Atlantic or a Niagara without having seen or heard of one or the other. “Many have said similar things but I prefer this one from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. My point being that it’s certainly not unpredictable that someone would have a low opinion, or indeed a high opinion if ones particular set of experiences lead them to believe that a tool is of low or high quality. The intent of my post was actually to derail this thread towards humor with a bit of sarcasm, but maybe a customer satisfaction questionnaire isn’t actually a bad idea. If we could get some actual data regarding tool quality, design and general user happiness it might actually be some good stuff. Of course it would be easy to abuse, but I suspect the tool manufacturers would actually love to have access to this data, if it were collected and audited with professionalism.Then we could actually prove that Leatherman tools are better Warning outlandish statement to follow:The Leatherman Charge TTi is the best multi-tool in the history of tools, and inventions in general. So there. That is all.