This is the Sentinel btw:

No kidding? I went two years ago and the information on the net was pretty contradictory as far as locking blades and one handed opening knives.Peter1960 wrote:Stop ... Stop ... Stop
To my best knowledge: The Switzerland has a new knife law and all of your Spydies are legal now *. No reason to buy an extra Swiss suitable Spydie, Whieee. If you want to know it for sure, please contact Swiss embassy in US.
*) I don't start rumors, I live in the neighborhood of Switzerland.
I suppose there are some spydies that are illegal in Switzerland, but none of mine are. The Para is a valid option to consider. I handled one recently and it's a fine piece of engineering. The native isn't my cup of tea. I miss the thumb ramp on it.mmyron1 wrote:Well then if no Spydie is "illegal" I suggest a Para Military. I love mine and is not too large if you ask me. Respectable blade length that IMHO is plenty friendly if you need to take it out in front of people. Or my other favorite, the Native.
No kidding Sir ... the new law is in force since early 2009.Aimless wrote:No kidding? I went two years ago and the information on the net was pretty contradictory as far as locking blades and one handed opening knives.
Too easy, take a Delica SE in VG-10.Whieee wrote:Kicking this thread again![]()
So, what Spydie to take along, or buy? I'm considering a D4 in VG-10, although I haven't decided whether it should be a PE or SE. CE doesn't appeal to me. The Spydie I take along should be able to take a beating, should not rust, should have about 3" of blade, a decent clip (preferably tip-UP), a lock, thumb ramp with jimping, and be affordable. Also it should be at least a bit NKP friendly :p
Any advice?
I had incorrect - old - input unfortunately. My friend experienced cofiscation and harassment once during crossing the swiss boarder, but it was a couple of yrs. ago. I built the experience based on his story.Aimless wrote:There's a pamphlet the Swiss put out on the first page of this thread that states otherwise.