To me multitools have passed their zenith. We reached the optimal form. We're now either refining or adding status to the product; or hyping refinement in order to keep the consumer jumping.
As Joanie Mitchel sang: On and on it goes, we dont know what we've got till its gone...
There's been a few threads questioning a lack of innovation from Victorinox (oh the heresy ) and the multi tool manufacturers, but how much innovation do we really need or want?
I don't think color changes or minor adjustments are really innovative.
Though a new color that I find appealing, plastered on a tool I consider solid, could get me to make a purchase.
Its just reality. IMO, no manufacturer can surpass the Swisstool/Spirit/Core/Blast/Fuse/ST300/Rebar/Juice/Squirt, except to make the ST300 and Rebar outside opening.
I’m holding out for a pocketable MT that features a real, functional lightsaber.
I’m holding out for a pocketable lightsaber that features a real, functional MT.
SOG's compound pivot mechanism was and remains a pretty solid advancement in the Multitool Arts, but that was 1995 - 30 years ago.
Beyond that, not a whole lot has changed since the PST. Maybe that speaks to the excellence of the PST in the first place.
So, the innovation trend line is moving sharply downward, at least in Powernoodleworld. Could a true quantum leap occur in the industry? Absolutely. We would love that, of course. But that's not where the evidence is pointing.
I agree fully with this. Its not the fault of the manufacturers. Its just reality. IMO, no manufacturer can surpass the Swisstool/Spirit/Core/Blast/Fuse/ST300/Rebar/Juice/Squirt, except to make the ST300 and Rebar outside opening.But there is also marketing, which demands something "new" from time to time, to keep the consumers' interest. The problem is that there is not much left that can be new. Look at the Wave Alpha. Same tools, different recipe. They say the consumers have been begging for MagnaCut, but we know better. Hey, lets put some G10 on there! Again, I'm not blaming Leatherman or the other manufacturers so much as I am recognizing that the MT world peaked some time ago. Magnets and MagnaCut are just different herbs in the same crock pot. At twice the price.
Once we reach the point where a multitool has the build quality and ergonomics of a swisstool spirit and the one handed operation of the arc, and the modularity of the flex, we will be "done" with innovating.
I liked that Leatherman started putting hammers on their tools. That was a good, and relatively recent, innovation that I'd like to see become standard. I hit stuff with my MT on occasion, and it's nice to have a designated spot for it that (shouldn't) break and is easy to use.
An LM Rebar with outside access tools would be a nice concept..
I have spent far too much time on social media where thing decent into mud slinging from the get go. All the replies here have been thought out, made respectfully, and kept a conversation running. What a pleasure!
I credit a lot that with the positive forum culture grown and protected by this forums well balanced owner, admins and moderators. That is a social art and a work effort most social media and other forums I've visited often sorely lack. So thanks for that! When social media started appearing back in the 90s I had a talk with a social anthropologist (or something to that end) who specialized in online communities and psychology. Back then it was a common misconception that you were anonymous online. Some people behaved very differently online and "anonymous" than they ever would actually facing anyone or in front of their friends or family. Which made him wonder which personality was the most true? The unhinged "anonymous" one, or the one constrained by real life social frameworks. Or maybe both, in the sense that personality could be a range rather than a single spot on a spectrum.Anyway, as for multitool innovations I think it could also be helpful to compare multi-tools with their various specialized tool counterparts. Specialized tools for a given task is generally better at it than a multi-tool that has to balance the often conflicting requirements of many tools at once. To the degree there is a functional difference there is room for improvement and innovation. So for instance pliers: Specialized pliers have more ergonomic handles with bent handles, often rubber coated and rounded edges. The plier heads have differently designed cutters than multi-tools, can have other style grips, and toughness and heat treatment can be superior. And to me replaceable cutters on multi-tools often seems like an easy cop-out rather than doing a proper quality cutter head in the first place. I have cutting pliers that for years and without issue have cut hard tough materials where just trying a single cut would mess up multi-tool cutters. I have indeed tried and notched many multi-tools. The damaged cutters can be replaced, but the task at hand would still remain unsolved. In the multi-tool world improved plier heads would be a worthwhile evolution/ innovation in my book.
In terms of normal pliers being more ergonomic, I think the swisstool spirit is probably the closest I have seen a multitool get to being as comfy as a set of normal pliersHaving a forged plier head vs cast would also be a significant upgrade.AFAIK, only Dakoyu offers a punched and CNCed plier head, and all other plier heads are cast and significantly weaker. I think more companies could definitely go the route of having a CNCed plier head in combination with the handle shape and ergonomics of the swisstool spirit and roxon flex
There are many ways of making a plier head, but few I've looked at look like straight castings. As many of these pliers are fairly thick (in sheet metal terms) punching is relatively expensive, and forming a 3D head from that resulting 2D part would either take some serious forging steps or relatively slow and expensive CNC machining with lots of material waste scrap leftover. So I get why punching and CNC machining is not used. In volume equal results can be made faster and less expensive in other ways. (CNC machining from stock would also be less strong than forging).My understanding is that casting is used to make a rough shape optimized for forging, and then it is forged one way or another to the almost final shape. Some minor adjustments, grinding clean up, heat treatment and surface treatments might follow. Forging will increase the hardness and strength, so a rough shape that require a fair bit of forging to reach final shape would improve on the initial casts properties. Lots of forging also causes less ductility/ more brittleness though so then heat treatment to get right material property balance might be needed too. On the flip side less forging is of less expensive, and might need no or less heat treatment after, so maybe they just make the casting rough as almost final shape already. Classic cost vs quality.There are many kinds of forging too with various pro and cons. I think casting rough, and forging from there, can give anything from great quality to mediocre - to me it seems more about how the process is done rather than the choice of process. That said, rather than starting with a close shape casting one could start with round stock material and take it from there with forging. I assume they have found that close shape casting costs less than initial forging from stock to reach the same state. I believe that latter could give a tougher and stronger product though.Anyway, certainly also an arena with potential innovations, although less visible for us end users.
Gerber found a way around thaat by duct taping a bunch of smaller plates together to get the desired thickness.
I know a lot of Made in China pliers that use forged plier heads as well