...There were originally *two* “Swiss Army” knives, one for officers, one for enlisted.
The original Victorinox "Officer's Knife", may be the most important knife in the company's long history. This knife was originally registered with the patent office in 1897 as The Officer's and Sports Knife. It was only preceded by the Original Soldier's Knife, but unlike the Soldier it was never part of a military contract. Officer's and gentlemen purchased the knife at cutlery stores. The knife's popularity was critical at the time as the company was close to bankruptcy, and the knife's popularity is credited with saving the company. In a sense it also bridged a society gap and entrenched the multi-tool knives in all levels of the society. This would help to ensure the longevity of the company and establish in the society the Swiss tradition of quality. The Small-Blade and famous Corkscrew made their debut on the Officer's Knife.
As much as we like digging up dead horses for the sole purpose of beating them some more, I think we should remember the occurrence of bottles needing a cap lifter and/or (no, “and” is not a mistake) corkscrew, as well as cans needing a can opener, varies quite a lot globally, and SAKs are sold the same in Norway as in Taipei as in San Francisco. (In addition to Vic being extremely conservative and all that jazz.)I think the Vic can opener is a scraper and small screwdriver, which just happens to be a good can opener. Even though I enjoy beer, and pretty much all the beer I drink needs a bottle opener, I still think the cap lifter is mainly a prying thing which just happens to work fine as a large screwdriver which just happens to have a small addition which makes it a fine cap lifter. Especially the cap lifter is something there is really no reason not to include, since it is just a tiny amount of extra steel on the light pry bar, which the manual insists on calling a screwdriver.Multis within multis.
Quote from SAKwikiQuoteThe original Victorinox "Officer's Knife", may be the most important knife in the company's long history. This knife was originally registered with the patent office in 1897 as The Officer's and Sports Knife. It was only preceded by the Original Soldier's Knife, but unlike the Soldier it was never part of a military contract. Officer's and gentlemen purchased the knife at cutlery stores. The knife's popularity was critical at the time as the company was close to bankruptcy, and the knife's popularity is credited with saving the company. In a sense it also bridged a society gap and entrenched the multi-tool knives in all levels of the society. This would help to ensure the longevity of the company and establish in the society the Swiss tradition of quality. The Small-Blade and famous Corkscrew made their debut on the Officer's Knife.
I haven't seen a screw top wine bottle since my last bottle of Riunite Lambrusco about 5 years ago...everything I like has synthetic corks.
By suggesting that they are designed for drinkers since they have bottle openers, does that mean that since they have numerous screwdrivers, they are for people who screw around a lot?