IMHO, you and son were pushing the awl and phillips beyond their limits. I also sharpen the awl on my Tinker (works just fine). None of the SAK tools are meant to replace full size screw drivers, etc. I love my Tinker, but also have a newish military style scout. I doubt it's tools would stand up for full size tools either, just MHO. To each his own preference.Rich
You're right, cbl51.Here, prompted by the backside Philips on a 111mm SAK breaking, Mr. Whippy tested a Tinker. The backside Philips on it broke with less than 10 Nm of torque on it. That's about 7.4 ft-lb.https://forum.multitool.org/index.php/topic,22526.msg416821.html#msg416821Then he did the same test with the screwdriver on the Bottle opener. It started twisting by 20 Nm of torque (14-15 ft-lb) and broke at 30 Nm (20-22 ft-lb). https://forum.multitool.org/index.php/topic,22565.msg417176.html#msg417176Important to note that the metal tip broke, not the tang, liners or the pin.
I have never had a backside tool fail, but I also don’t use them that much. In actual use, even the backside phillips isn’t as useful for me because of its location in the middle instead of an end. There frequently isn’t sufficient room.In some ways I like the 93mm SAK sleek look a feel with no back tools, but I hate the limited offerings and that I loose the scales tools. At a minimum they need a Farmer-X.
I'm also firmly in Carls camp regarding back tools. I much prefer the smooth feel and find the backside tools much more fiddly to use than the utility they provide. The inline dedicated all on the Pioneer is vastly better at drilling/ reaming for my uses than the reamer/awl on tinkers/Spartans etc . But then again I've never needed to sew heavy duty stuff together, so for someone else it may be their go to tool. That said the small blade is the one tool I miss most when carrying the Pioneer Regarding breaking tools, I would be so bold as to venture that most of us know damn well when we are asking much more of a tool than it is designed for. My take is that you are of course free to do so, but never forget that when you throw your money on the table, you dont everytime get it back, and you went into it knowing that.It'd be a boring word if we were all the same eh?
Largely agree with the OP. I do like to have a corkscrew at hand, though. I only have SAKs with the back side Phillips for their handling comfort. IME the tip of the can opener works just fine except in cases of extreme torque (apply too much and the tip twists before the pin does) and where deep access is needed. And the back side awl is a miserable thing compared to the 93mm one. I can see a way of improving it a little - at the cost of the nail nick.The only thing I wish for on the Pioneer is a small blade in addition to the awl and openers. I find the Pioneer's blade too thick and wedgy sometimes. It's eventhicker along the spine than the 111mm blade. The 58mm blade on my keyring is too flexible for my liking.Agreed and well said!
If I could get a small blade on a 93mm.... Oh the places I could go.
I might be missing something here, but I'm assuming you are aware of the current 93mm models with the electrician's blade or the pruner blade, as well as the now discontinued Pioneer Settler with the small spear/pen blade?
You and me both brother !(although I think there'd be more than just us two fizzing at the bung for such a knife )
Ask and ye shall receive, it being released later this year I believe
I saw that, although I was mentioning that because the huntsman/fieldmaster seem a popular toolset. The one I would really love to see is adding the magnifying glass and inline Phillips to the Pioneer-X, but I doubt that is as popular of a toolset especially for those liking the more ruggedness of the 93mm.
I'm looking forward to the Farmer X and at the same time I'm not... I think it is going to be too heavy to EDC...
Let's do some SAK math (with apologies to our friends who use the metric system, all weights below are in ounces):Weight of 93mm Scissors Layer = Weight of Pioneer X - Weight of Pioneer = 3.3 - 2.5 = 0.8Estimated Weight of Farmer X = Weight of Farmer + Weight of 93mm Scissors Layer = 3 + 0.8 = 3.8So, at 3.8 ounces, the Farmer X is heavier than the Huntsman, Fieldmaster, and Explorer, at 3.4, 3.5, and 3.6 ounces, respectively, but not by much. It would actually be exactly the same as the Mountaineer, and lighter than the Deluxe Tinker at 4.3 ounces.Obviously whether or not a knife is too heavy to EDC is an individual decision. However, for anyone already carrying a 4-layer 91mm SAK (even the lightest, the Huntsman), I don't think the Farmer X would be much of an adjustment.
Plus its got one other thing going for it;It's Alox!