The star drive heads for the clips on both of my carry folders just happened to be the exact same size as the security screws on my Ring Doorbell. Thankfully, I kept the installation tools in the little roll that Ring provides.
The star drive heads for the clips on both of my carry folders just happened to be the exact same size as the security screws on my Ring Doorbell. Thankfully, I kept the installation tools in the little roll that Ring provides.
"No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms." - Thomas Jefferson, Virginia Constitution, Draft 1, 1776
So I have seen these blades in the past, but didn't know all this. But Ohio knife laws have always been goofy, but they recently changed them to make them better and goofier. Now there is no issue with any blade being concealed (I think including a fixed blade?), unless you use it as a weapon (even defensively?...) then it somehow retroactively becomes illegal to have been carrying it concealed, got it? So it would probably be tough to say one of these was not a weapon, so it is probably a good thing I didn't read this thread last night...
Some pruning knives, electrician’s knives, and other utility knives have a hook or hawkbill style blade. If one plans on carrying such a knife, learning its utilitarian purposes could potentially prove helpful.
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Any legal information I may post is general information, and is not legal advice. Such information may or may not apply to your specific situation. I am not your attorney unless an attorney-client relationship is separately and privately established.
I was successfully ignoring the two at a local pawn shop, one NIB without the Boye detent, and one new looking, no box/papers with the Boye detent. $120 and $80 respectively.
I don't know how much longer I can comtinue to ignore...
pat
Since the thread is wandering anyway...
Some tool advice, if I may...
When you find yourself “needing” a tool like this that can be had in a set, buy the most comprehensive and highest quality set you can find/afford. If the choice is between a single, top shelf, size and a middle-shelf comprehensive set, get the set. If you really needed that top shelf version of the single tool you’d already own the top-shelf set.
Drivers and drill bits spring to mind as prime examples of this.
When it comes to drivers, I’d look for sets with one handle and multiple bits for the majority of buyers. Primarily due to space-saving concerns. Again, if you needed a full set with dedicated handles you’d either already have it or you’d know it.
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