Welcome to the forum The reason it fell appart is you dremmeled away the very thing that was holding it together. The bolts you dremmeled away not only hold the scales on, they with help of the bushings keep the tool together and by even removing a little bit of the top of the bolts you loosen the hold the bushings have on the liners. If you want thin, the ALOX Classic will do the light jobs just fine.
Quote from: enki_ck on July 19, 2016, 09:23:58 AMWelcome to the forum The reason it fell appart is you dremmeled away the very thing that was holding it together. The bolts you dremmeled away not only hold the scales on, they with help of the bushings keep the tool together and by even removing a little bit of the top of the bolts you loosen the hold the bushings have on the liners. If you want thin, the ALOX Classic will do the light jobs just fine.+1 and Like the man's post Show contentOh, and General Torque Show contentBeat you to it, pfrsantos! I've always wanted to do that but so far I behaved.
proceeded to smooth out the bolts sticking out of the sides with my dremel tool
Hello, and welcome! Basically everything I was going to say (dremmeling compromised integrity, recommend Alox Classic, finding your perfect EDC is half the fun of the forum etc), so I'll just add that perhaps you need a change in how you carry your tools? A good pocket dangler (I recommend the Nite Ize #00 S-biner, with one gate removed to hook the corner of your pocket) can make what was a bulky tool all but dissapear in your pocket.
yet I'm afraid that staying with another Victorinox Classic (even the skinnier Victorinox Classic SD, Silver Alox) won't be hardy enough for light duties outside of an office environment.
Quote from: Thintieguy on July 19, 2016, 09:11:00 AMyet I'm afraid that staying with another Victorinox Classic (even the skinnier Victorinox Classic SD, Silver Alox) won't be hardy enough for light duties outside of an office environment. A Classic should last for many years if it is used within its design parameters. And even if it breaks after 3 years, at $12 it cost less than a pizza to replace.Turn that frown upside down.
Nobody agrees with the Ladybug I see.
Thanks for all the great responses! I had to dremel the bolts/bushings or it was going to shred my pockets. Well, I did get some good years out of the thing. I'll go for the Alox for thinness and see if the metal housing adds some torque to it. With a new job and 4 more darned keys in my pocket I don't want to get that "custodian pocket syndrome" - feeling like I've got dozens of things weighing me down (no offense to custodians intended!).
Still have an old, smooth Alox but no scissors on it. Seems like they are not being sold on Swiss Army site.
Quote from: kkokkolis on July 19, 2016, 05:54:22 PMNobody agrees with the Ladybug I see.I carry a Dragonfly 2, it's a nice knife very capable.As far as durability goes, I would not stake my life on FRN... that is why I'm looking to get a G10 version.