These days, I wonder if the little SAK classic is the semi disposable keychain knife of our time?
The Classic is a great all-in-one tool for building plastic models.
I guess the list of what I was trying to say was, growing up in the 1950's when people really did need a knife more in their day to day life as there was no tear off tops, pull tabs, and was people carried small keychain tools and knives... It seems like now, the EDC crowns thinks they will die if they don't carry enough gear to build an A frame chalet in the wilderness.
My Old man was a die hard minimalist. I watched dad get by with a Case peanut, a Sear's keychain screw driver, and a P-38.
And yet it was those same 1950s that gave birth to the absolute mega-overkill EDC kitchen sink toolkits known as the Champion and later SwissChamp... if a couple of inch-long pocket lancets were all anyone needed, how would these ever become flagship models?
I can only really wonder how many of these mega SAK's are collectors items vs really being carried everyday? The sales figures would be interesting. I can't recall seeing a Swiss Champ in the wild, but I see classics, recruits, tinkers by the score, with the sighting leader being the classic. Once you rule out the cult worship item crowd, I'll bet most people are pretty moderate in their choices.
Good question, and I can only think the answer is 'money'. All marketing, the same way the car industry, gun industry, and others sell the overkill merchandise to folks wth more disposable income than common sense. After all, even though most people can get around with a Toyota Corolla, some folks want the Avalon or even the Lexus with all the trimmings. Personal taste I guess. I myself could never see tying up large amounts of money in a perishable item that depreciates at a high rate and once you hit 10 years old and 100,000 miles it ain't worth much. I can only really wonder how many of these mega SAK's are collectors items vs really being carried everyday? The sales figures would be interesting. I can't recall seeing a Swiss Champ in the wild, but I see classics, recruits, tinkers by the score, with the sighting leader being the classic. Once you rule out the cult worship item crowd, I'll bet most people are pretty moderate in their choices.
Tasky, do you think that more and more people are shifting away from SAKs to plier based tools? Are we becoming a minority? I'm 54 and finding fewer people even carrying knives, let alone SAKs (except the 58s).
It might be similar to cars, in that what is considered necessary now wasn't even dreamed of 30 years ago.