(Image removed from quote.)The Super Tool 300 has been in production since September, 2009, and the passage of time tends to push fine multitools like the ST300 - along with fine cars, movies and women - into our collective past.But let me tell you something - the ST300 is still a great multitool that competes favorably with the best multitools of 2024.What's so good about ST300? Let's think about it.For one, the ST300 is a large, heavy duty multitool with simple, old school, dare I set retro design elements and engineering. The inside-opening tools are simply nested, with no hunting and flipping the multitool back and forth to find what you are looking for. The locking mechanism is simple, easy to use and robust, being the culmination of the Super Tool, ST200 and Core bloodline. As someone approaching retirement age, I appreciate the simplicity and utility of the past. It works and its comfortable. The ST300 has no neodymium magnets or DLC coated, Rodeo Drive blade steel because, well, it doesn't need them. It doesn't exist to impress as a spendy piece of pocket jewelry. Its exists to turn bolts and screws, cut carpet, saw branches and grab things. And speaking of spendy, in an age where inflation and other factors are driving multitool prices to absurd highs, you can still buy the ST300, in stainless or black oxide finish, with a quality sheath, for a quite reasonable, dare I say retro $99.95 shipped. That's somewhat mind-bending. Its as if the marketing folks at Leatherman forget to raise the MSRP to $149.95.Each to his or her own, but in my view the Super Tool 300 competes favorably with the $229.95 Leatherman ARC. I cannot tell the difference between the blade steels, and actually prefer the old school deployment of the ST300 tools over (for me, anyway) the ARC's awkward, magnetic deployment. The ARC loses the ST300's awesome, long shank phillips driver - maybe my favorite tool on any MT - giving you instead a stubby 2-dimensional pseudo phillips. Gone on the ARC is the ST300's serrated blade, which I find more useful than the scissor and eye glasses driver the ARC gives you. [I'm a scissor snob and only use Victorinox scissors]. You get 3 sizes of flat drivers on the ST300 - the largest serving as a medium duty pry tool - and 1 on the ARC. Were they priced equally, I would have a hard time choosing between them. The outside-open main blade on the ARC is nice. But is it worth a $129 upcharge? Not for me.Don't get me wrong. I bought a used ARC, and would be muchly happy to win this month's donation giveaway ARC. Its a solid multitool no doubt. And all of the cool kids say its the future of MTs. I'm just advocating the idea that the sleeper Super Tool 300 competes with it on more or less equal footing, and at 43% of the cost.The winds of change are blowing through the multitool industry, and we have seen many trusted friends vanish. Think about the Leatherman PST, Blast, Core, Crunch, Juice, PS4, OHT and others. Friends, I mean multitools, we thought would live on forever. I can envision the Super Tool 300 disappearing from the Leatherman website some day without notice (sadly, that's how they do things at Leatherman), or seeing the MSRP jump up by 50%. Either way, now is the time to buy a Super Tool 300 at $99.95 - or better yet, one stainless and one black oxide. Someday you may thank me.
Blade HQ keeps saying the ST300 is discontinued and out of stock.
The ST 300 is the tool I add to my belt when there is a hurricane or tropical storm on the way, and it stays on my belt for the duration. I'd hate to see it discontinued.
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The ST300 and Micra complement each other very well.(Image removed from quote.)
Powernoodle is an enabler
Phenomenal pic
Never had a ST300 break but I had 2 separate Cores do that very thing
A wounded warrior from a few years ago.