Routine maintenance is part of caring for a tool. OP wasnt blaming spyderco, and asked for alternatives. It may be spydercos excellent customer service that compels people to go to them in situations like this, as well as forumites smacking people down for airing negatively percieved issues on the forums and telling them to address spyderco directly.N. Brian Huegel wrote:Just curious, besides your knife, what other tools do you regularly take-apart to clean? Guns? Power Tools? Fishing Reels? Wristwatch? And if so, what do you do when you loose or damage a part? Why was disassembly necessary to clean your Southard? Do you feel that it is Spyderco's obligation to provide parts free of charge when your actions were in complete violation to their warranty? (http://www.spyderco.com/edge-u-cation/index.php?item=10) If not, what do you feel would be a fair charge for this service? Once again, I am just asking and not trying to cause bad feelings or make you look foolish. I am just trying to understand this phenomenon and compulsion of many formites to take-apart their knives subsequently loosing parts, stripping screws, reassembling incorrectly, only to then use this forum to complain that Spyderco is somehow at fault and should be expected to correct the situation gratis and expeditiously. This seems to be a reoccurring theme based on the numerous threads just in the last six months alone. Where is the ELU’s responsibility? Where is the dealer's responsibility? What other industries, making high-end tools, offer an unlimited warranty? And should knife companies offer such unconditional warranties? I look forward to a candid, insightful discussion.
I am amazed every time someome mentions never taking a knife apart. I just have to ask myself why not.RanCoWeAla wrote:I am amazed every time someome mentions taking a knife apart. I just have to ask myself why.
I agree and I never met a warranty that I wouldn't void.pezie wrote:I am amazed every time someome mentions never taking a knife apart. I just have to ask myself why not.
...And why not? There's hardly a risk involved in taking a knife apart (other than that of losing a screw, which is neither catastrophic nor unavoidable); it's not rocket science. Unlike most people in this forum, I'm a humble novice to knives, but I have never made a knife worse by taking it apart. In one or two occasions, it took me a bit of patience to get good blade centering and smooth action and no blade play (I learned that in some knives, the tightening torque of the different scale screws affects blade movement and centering), but those knives hadn't been perfect to begin with (no Spydies).
I'm not a compulsive knife dismantler, though. I'm very happy with my pinned Manix 2 Lightweight and UKPK.![]()
great post!N. Brian Huegel wrote:Just curious, besides your knife, what other tools do you regularly take-apart to clean? Guns? Power Tools? Fishing Reels? Wristwatch? And if so, what do you do when you loose or damage a part? Why was disassembly necessary to clean your Southard? Do you feel that it is Spyderco's obligation to provide parts free of charge when your actions were in complete violation to their warranty? (http://www.spyderco.com/edge-u-cation/index.php?item=10) If not, what do you feel would be a fair charge for this service? Once again, I am just asking and not trying to cause bad feelings or make you look foolish. I am just trying to understand this phenomenon and compulsion of many formites to take-apart their knives subsequently loosing parts, stripping screws, reassembling incorrectly, only to then use this forum to complain that Spyderco is somehow at fault and should be expected to correct the situation gratis and expeditiously. This seems to be a reoccurring theme based on the numerous threads just in the last six months alone. Where is the ELU’s responsibility? Where is the dealer's responsibility? What other industries, making high-end tools, offer an unlimited warranty? And should knife companies offer such unconditional warranties? I look forward to a candid, insightful discussion.
Tom, I think you missed Brian's point. He wasn't suggesting that taking mechanical things apart is unusual, or wrong, he was simply pointing out that, when one does so and loses and/or damages parts, one must accept the responsibility for one's incompetence rather than blaming (or at least appearing to blame) the manufacturer.TomAiello wrote:I take my guns apart to clean them every time I use them. I think that's fairly normal, actually.
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