In some countries, including UK, carrying a forbidden knife can bring you into jail - so not everyone is ready to take that risk.Miss Dragonfly wrote:That's a good idea. Seems to qualify to the letter of the law.![]()
When I go down to NYC I still sometimes carry my DFly, usually hidden though. Maybe I'm naive about this, but I don't think cops there even care unless you're stirring up trouble or wielding it about. I think it's the non-threatening size of the DFly that makes it less problematic. A Military or bigger, that I just wouldn't risk.
Also, once you have a knife that locks up solid, it's tough to give that up. At least that's my feeling.
Did you mean a true "Clip-It"? If not, I guess the PITS is easier to close than my three UK Slip-Its (G10 II, CF, and Ti) from what you say. I wouldn't know, since a Forum member once said they have a stronger 'stay-open' feature than the UK knives and I have never held a PITS. That's why I used it as an example, instead of the UK.Evil D wrote:You might be able to tighten the pivot down on a PITS and get it to stay shut, but probably never as strong as a true slip joint. The problem is the larger the knife, the larger and heavier the handle, and the heavier the handle is the easier it'll be to gravity drop the handle open. I can't get my Opinel 10 to drop open but the handle on that weighs almost nothing and it's a Military sized knife.
I meant a traditional slip joint knife that has no lock. They tend to have a very strong spring that holds the blade open, which in turn creates a very strong close bias which makes them more difficult to flick open while holding the blade. As you pointed out though it really doesn't matter as long as there isn't a lock.SpydieJay wrote:Did you mean a true "Clip-It"? If not, I guess the PITS is easier to close than my three UK Slip-Its (G10 II, CF, and Ti) from what you say. I wouldn't know, since a Forum member once said they have a stronger 'stay-open' feature than the UK knives and I have never held a PITS. That's why I used it as an example, instead of the UK.Evil D wrote:You might be able to tighten the pivot down on a PITS and get it to stay shut, but probably never as strong as a true slip joint. The problem is the larger the knife, the larger and heavier the handle, and the heavier the handle is the easier it'll be to gravity drop the handle open. I can't get my Opinel 10 to drop open but the handle on that weighs almost nothing and it's a Military sized knife.
Also, it doesn't matter if you can gravity-drop a Slip-It by its handle, so it doesn't matter if it the handle is made of lead and weighs a pound. The law is quite specific that a gravity knife by any interpretation (including dropping the handle while holding the blade) is only one if it LOCKS, defined by a locking release mechanism. I'd take a 3 3/4" to 3 13/16" long blade with a more robust UK slip-it stay-open feature, just to stay well under 4", but that would still not be illegal to carry in NYC, if you aren't doing anything wrong with it and don't expose it. But it may also not be PC for Spyderco to make such a knife.
Yes, I did, thanks. But I would want it 3.5" or larger up to 3 7/8" with the thumb hole. Of course a little more tension of the slip-it would be nice too. Sal hasn't chimed in yet on this possibility, maybe for the reason I mentioned above.twinboysdad wrote:You know the DKPK is basically a shrunken Caly 3.5 with no thumb hole, that design as a 3.5 inch blade would be slipitastic
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