Stressmaster may have the answer. It may be that you have a larger spring than called for in the knife. That would only be the case if you have a large spring in a 84mm or smaller knife.
It looks to me like you have a large spring which is too large for the 84mm.
They are so cheap and take seconds to change.
If it has a small blade it's a Climber (small), but if it's got a nail file then its called an Alumnus.http://www.sakwiki.com/tiki-index.php?page=AlumnusThough as it say on the SAKwiki we're not certain where the name came from.(Image removed from quote.)
Scissors backspring is broken by the looks of it. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news
Quote from: Neil on October 06, 2010, 09:14:13 PMScissors backspring is broken by the looks of it. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news Yep, in picture six you can see where the scissor backspring is cracked. I have an old golfer with that same problem. Looks exactly the same although mine is still holding together well enough as a user.
the middle layer, almost to the edge of the pic. you can see the faint line accross the backspring. that indicates the spring is cracked. you can probably see it more pronounced on the inside if you open all the tools and shine a flashlight inside.