I have two Stayglow Climbers left - a user and one in an unopened box, both from the days when they were in the ballpark of of $25. REEEEEEEEEALLY wrestling with the urge to yank a pair of scales and make a Stayglow Serrated Spartan...Edit: ooops...kinda confused two different threads. Oh well.
Every so often I like the the simple but mighty Waiter, especially in Spring and Summer shorts. Beveridges beware!
It could have been a Waiter Wednesday but that would require me to remember what the heck day of the week it is!
If you have a Thirsty Thursday you may still need that Waiter
(Image removed from quote.)
...yes but too much Thursty Thursday and I may forget again
Yes there was a 91 but good luck finding one. I think there was one on that bay for a ridiculous price??
Actually it is not that difficult to add a pen to the 84mm scales. I did it to my Waiter using file from 111mm knife. The width of the file was just right to fit the pen.
I assume there’s an unopened slot like in the non-plus 91mm scales?
No, there is not, but it is still doable. You can do it a bit rough like me or super clean like Kamakiri:https://forum.multitool.org/index.php/topic,88553.0.html
Can the waiter handle opening a giant bottle of cheap wine? Yes…but with a lot of elbow grease. These big boys need 4 or more layer SAKs to open. I’ll take this as a sign to stick to the smaller bottles.
I have a suggestion. Don't screw the corkscrew most of the way in and then pull the cork straight up. Screw the corkscrew all the way in, until the opening of the bottle is pressing hard against the back of the knife. Continue turning until the cork starts to rotate inside the glass. Continue turning as you draw the cork out.
Thanks, bent a corkscrew on a larger SAK doing it incorrectly.Screw top wine, can beer and vodka will not damage your corkscrew, trust me...
:cheers:Ha, yes I had with a can of summer shandy after opening the wine.