snooks
Well-Known Member
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So were these knives straight out of the box, or did anyone check to see if they needed sharpening?
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The blades were out of the box, and all were "sharp". Sharpening is a subject open to human error and adds an element of doubt into the test. We are impartial and don't add factors that could sway the performance of the products we test. As others have suggested, the leatherman blades are sharp out of the box, there was no reason to doubt that any of the others weren't
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I wouldn't use a new knife without sharpening it first, just the same as a wood chisel or any other edge tool. How did you measure the sharpness?
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Sharpness was measured by cutting the three different ropes, 3 plat, matt braid, and dyneema, all were tested on a flat surface like a chopping board and in a loop. The same person tested all of the blades in a random order.
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Why did you test the blades with teeth, as they obviously are not meant to cut ropes?
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By teeth, if you meant serrated "obviously" you've never heard of the Gerber E-Z out Rescue knife, a serrated blade that was designed with the jagged angles to cut through ropes and fibres, consequently it would cut through rope like a hot knife through butter. Where the multi tools had two blades (serrated and flat) they were both tested, and the faster attempt kept for the video. Non of the blades had "teeth" like a directional wood saw blade they were all either serrated or flat, or a combination of the two. Some had large serrated blades, others were less pronounced as can be see by the article in YM.
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A bit of a pointless test if you ask me, except it underlined the need to have a decent chopping board on the boat.
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Sorry to hear you though it was a pointless test...but seeing the knives were for use on a yacht, and the most likely thing you'd need to cut with a multi tool on a yacht is rope, the test team at YM thought it was a fair test...So how would you have tested the knives?
The video was filmed to accompany the article in this months YM, not as a standalone feature in it's own right. While the video was just showing the cutting quality of the blades, there was far more to the majority of multitools than just a knife.
I hope that explains things a in a bit more detail
So were these knives straight out of the box, or did anyone check to see if they needed sharpening?
[/ QUOTE ]
The blades were out of the box, and all were "sharp". Sharpening is a subject open to human error and adds an element of doubt into the test. We are impartial and don't add factors that could sway the performance of the products we test. As others have suggested, the leatherman blades are sharp out of the box, there was no reason to doubt that any of the others weren't
[ QUOTE ]
I wouldn't use a new knife without sharpening it first, just the same as a wood chisel or any other edge tool. How did you measure the sharpness?
[/ QUOTE ]
Sharpness was measured by cutting the three different ropes, 3 plat, matt braid, and dyneema, all were tested on a flat surface like a chopping board and in a loop. The same person tested all of the blades in a random order.
[ QUOTE ]
Why did you test the blades with teeth, as they obviously are not meant to cut ropes?
[/ QUOTE ]
By teeth, if you meant serrated "obviously" you've never heard of the Gerber E-Z out Rescue knife, a serrated blade that was designed with the jagged angles to cut through ropes and fibres, consequently it would cut through rope like a hot knife through butter. Where the multi tools had two blades (serrated and flat) they were both tested, and the faster attempt kept for the video. Non of the blades had "teeth" like a directional wood saw blade they were all either serrated or flat, or a combination of the two. Some had large serrated blades, others were less pronounced as can be see by the article in YM.
[ QUOTE ]
A bit of a pointless test if you ask me, except it underlined the need to have a decent chopping board on the boat.
[/ QUOTE ]
Sorry to hear you though it was a pointless test...but seeing the knives were for use on a yacht, and the most likely thing you'd need to cut with a multi tool on a yacht is rope, the test team at YM thought it was a fair test...So how would you have tested the knives?
The video was filmed to accompany the article in this months YM, not as a standalone feature in it's own right. While the video was just showing the cutting quality of the blades, there was far more to the majority of multitools than just a knife.
I hope that explains things a in a bit more detail