UK Swiss army knife maker to produce version without a blade - Victorinox, producer of the celebrated pocket tool, responds to ‘plague of knife crime’ with new variant

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For more than a century, the Swiss army knife has been an essential piece of kit for everyone from picnickers and equestrians, to golfers and astronauts.

But now the maker of the pocket-knife, with its red or blue shell and multiple tools, has bowed to what an English judge last week called the “plague of knife crime” by designing a new range without blades.

In response to an increasing number of countries imposing bans or restrictions on carrying knives, Victorinox, the Swiss firm that produces the pocket tools, is in the early stages of developing the first range of bladeless products designed specifically for activities where a blade would not be required.

“We’re concerned about the increasing regulation of knives due to the violence in the world,” said Carl Elsener, the fourth-generation CEO of the family-run company.

“In some markets, the blade creates an image of a weapon. I have in mind creating a tool that would be useful for cyclists. Cyclists have a need for specific tools but not necessarily a blade,” he said. “We already have a tool specifically for golfers.”

Last week, Mr Justice Saini blamed the “plague of knife crime” in Bristol and surrounding areas for the murder of 16-year-old Mikey Roynon, a talented teenage rapper stabbed in the neck at a house party in Bath.

The same week, a 15-year-old boy who stabbed another teenager in the heart in full view of pupils leaving a primary school in Leeds, was found guilty of murder.

It came amid reports of soaring demand for body armour for shopping centre security staff amid a 65% rise in violent and abusive incidents in the past two years.

Under UK law, a person can only carry a knife in public if it has a folding blade that is less than 3in (7.62cm) long.

For all other knives, it is illegal to carry them in public without a good reason, which can include needing the knife for work, wearing it as part of a national costume or for religious reasons, such as the curved kirpan knife carried by some Sikhs.

Elsener said Victorinox was responding to the tightening of regulations by developing blade-less tools for specific outdoor activities or sports.

Victorinox produces about 10m of the pocket tools each year. There are about 400 different types to choose from, including one that boasts 73 functions. They have even been carried into space by Nasa astronauts.

However, until now they have always had at least one blade.

The company has already had to adapt its products to tightened restrictions on carrying knives and in the aftermath of 9/11 the company’s sales fell by 30%.

Even in Switzerland, the home of the brand, there has been discussion about what people are permitted to carry. In 2016, there was a parliamentary debate about banning blades longer than 5cm. One MP even asked: “Will the famous Swiss army knife be forbidden?” The proposed amendment was dropped.

The Swiss army knife was first developed in Ibach, Switzerland, in 1891 and was orginally referred to as an Offiziersmesser, or officer’s knife, as the company had a contract to supply knives to the army.

The product was given the name Swiss army knife six years later.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...nife-maker-to-produce-version-without-a-blade (Archive)
 
They already have a keychain one for amerimutt TSA compliance with scissors rather than a knife.

Would be nice to have a full multitool that can carry on.

Yeah I was gonna say, this is nothing new...

I rock a Leatherman Style for airport travel because I like the pliers. Never really got into Swiss Army Knives to edc due to the lack of pliers so I usually carry a Gerber Dime or full size Gerber.

Protip: open the tools on the Style or any other TSA compliant multitool you bring onto a plane as you go through the checkpoint and set on top of your stuff in the bin. Once I did that thet stopped harassing me about it every other time and often profusely and sincerely thank me.
 
Man, thank God knives are such an advanced technology it's impossible to make one without purchasing an expensive Swiss multi-tool. This will finally bring about the end of knife crime for good.

Knifler is le finished!
 
They already have a keychain one for amerimutt TSA compliance with scissors rather than a knife.

Would be nice to have a full multitool that can carry on.
Nail clippers and GI Joe's rifle are terrorist items but cigarette lighters and scissors are okay. Gotcha.
 
Swiss army knifes, at least the ones I owned are pretty lousy for any of the things they have tools for anyway. The blades in particular are usually pretty bad. I've never really liked multitools in general but someone got me a leatherman for Christmas last year and I was pretty surprised how good the knife is on it. It's not one of those flimsy multitool/Swiss army knife blades, it's an actual proper pocket knife blade and sharp as fuck and quick and easy to fold out.
 
What would the ultimate bugman swiss army non-knife have?

Sim tool of course because you gotta check out all the new phones and letting reviewers know what they got wrong.

A screen wiping thing of some kind.

Soylent opener.

An nfc chip with your favorite chipotle order saved in it, tap of the swiss tool, tap of the phone and you're eating good!

A display with a rolling code for reddit 2 factor auth, just try and hack me chuds
 
guess I am gonna use the saw now
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Either that or there will be a marked sudden increase in people getting their eyes jabbed out with corkscrews

The idea of dealing with stabbings by releasing a knife without the knife part is laughably absurd. They should be doing something to deal with the criminals not the weapons they use. They'll just switch to something else if they have to
 
Swiss army knifes, at least the ones I owned are pretty lousy for any of the things they have tools for anyway. The blades in particular are usually pretty bad. I've never really liked multitools in general but someone got me a leatherman for Christmas last year and I was pretty surprised how good the knife is on it. It's not one of those flimsy multitool/Swiss army knife blades, it's an actual proper pocket knife blade and sharp as fuck and quick and easy to fold out.
Sounds like you are talking about a cheap Chinesium knock-off you buy at a souvenir shop. Victorinox knives are legit and will cut you up. They also make locking versions with a locking blade:
https://www.victorinox.com/en-US/Products/Swiss-Army-Knives/Large-Pocket-Knives/Trekker/p/0.8463.MW3https://www.victorinox.com/en-US/Products/Swiss-Army-Knives/Large-Pocket-Knives/Trekker/p/0.8463.MW3

I can’t help but think this is actually a subtle jab at other European countries. The standard size Swiss army knife is short enough to be legal in the UK anyway.
 
A Swiss army knife is a keychain fob that doubles as an "emergency backup" of all the tools you wish you had, including a knife: It's the last think you'd carry if you actually wanted to stab someone.

Having owned a Swiss army knife for years, all this will change is that I'd have to get off my arse and look for a actual pencil sharpener.

Leatherman have better build quality anyway.
 
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Knives aren't going away completely so I'm not stressed.
The way this country (the UK, since this is a British article) has a bee in its bonnet about knives is really quite funny to me. On one hand you can tell there are plenty of people out there who want to ban them completely if they could, but on the other hand they can't because (unlike with guns) there are plenty of circumstances in day-to-day life where their use is not only non-violent but necessary for basically everyone.

So we have this situation where the pearl-clutchers desperately try to find whatever angle they can to scratch their itch to ban things (for example, banning "zombie knives" which are just regular knives with mall ninja decoration on it) while also having to begrudgingly accept the reality that you can't actually ban them without causing all kinds of problems. You can tell it drives them bananas.
 
Swiss army knifes, at least the ones I owned are pretty lousy for any of the things they have tools for anyway. The blades in particular are usually pretty bad. I've never really liked multitools in general but someone got me a leatherman for Christmas last year and I was pretty surprised how good the knife is on it. It's not one of those flimsy multitool/Swiss army knife blades, it's an actual proper pocket knife blade and sharp as fuck and quick and easy to fold out.
Swiss army knives are gimmicks for boomers, they're shit by modern standards and about as useful as Tacticool desert camo in snow.
 
While I'd like to assume this was my country passing another stupid law it just sounds like the manufacturers making an attempt to push something new where they think there's a demand.
 
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Swiss army knifes, at least the ones I owned are pretty lousy for any of the things they have tools for anyway. The blades in particular are usually pretty bad. I've never really liked multitools in general but someone got me a leatherman for Christmas last year and I was pretty surprised how good the knife is on it. It's not one of those flimsy multitool/Swiss army knife blades, it's an actual proper pocket knife blade and sharp as fuck and quick and easy to fold out.
Your Leatherman benefactor has good taste. There's a lot of swiss imitators, real Victorinox blades are nicer than $10 gas station novelty ones with a common name engraved on it.
 
...This isn't gonna stop people from making their own knives. If convicts in prison can already make blades, so can your average Joe.
 
Swiss army knives are gimmicks for boomers, they're shit by modern standards and about as useful as Tacticool desert camo in snow.
Fightin' talk. Now, please wait (and don't move - although trembling in fear is permitted) while I deploy my mighty, sub-3" Swiss-made blade. Which, I might add, I have diligently studied, so don't say you weren't warned.
 
Sounds like you are talking about a cheap Chinesium knock-off you buy at a souvenir shop. Victorinox knives are legit and will cut you up. They also make locking versions with a locking blade:
https://www.victorinox.com/en-US/Products/Swiss-Army-Knives/Large-Pocket-Knives/Trekker/p/0.8463.MW3https://www.victorinox.com/en-US/Products/Swiss-Army-Knives/Large-Pocket-Knives/Trekker/p/0.8463.MW3

I can’t help but think this is actually a subtle jab at other European countries. The standard size Swiss army knife is short enough to be legal in the UK anyway.
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Still glad that Victorinox still keeps some of the Wenger designs. It's Ranger Grip or nothing.
 
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