#154888 - 11/11/08 09:14 AM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: ]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 09/10/08
Posts: 382
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#154889 - 11/11/08 09:49 AM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: Art_in_FL]
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Enthusiast
Registered: 07/02/08
Posts: 395
Loc: Ohio
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I've never been quite sure what the supposed advantage of a 'spring assisted' knife is supposed to be. IMO most every type of folder worth having has a 'opening hole' or notch that allows it to be opened single handed about as fast as anyone could want. For me, regular folders are faster to open that those assisted ones. I agree that with the knives available today, spring assisted opening isn't all that beneficial but it hasn't been all that many years since opening a typical pocket knife was a two handed operation.
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#154907 - 11/11/08 03:44 PM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: Grouch]
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Addict
Registered: 03/19/07
Posts: 690
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I don't see much purpose for an assisted opening knife either. I can open my waved Endura faster than any other knife, autos included. Besides, it only takes gross motor skills - it's just a matter of puling your knife out of the pocket. Whereas with any assisted opening/auto knife you need to fiddle with a button.
Seriously, if speed is of concern, get a waved knife. As simple as that and (still) legal.
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#154931 - 11/11/08 06:52 PM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: el_diabl0]
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Stranger
Registered: 06/18/07
Posts: 8
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I removed the spring from my kershaw so there would be no grey area. I was afraid that officers or security guards who didn't share my legal opinions would confiscate it.
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#154933 - 11/11/08 07:08 PM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: mwigant]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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The real social problem with any quick opening knife is the act of showing off opening it.It's not unlike the many tricks you can perform with a Colt SAA or a martial artist getting into an exaggerated fighing stance. By the time you've twirled your Colt, flipped the filipino butterfly or braced yourself the other person has either already shot,stabbed or drop kicked you between the goal posts. It's a nice feature for emergency one handed opening. Otherwise, I save the mechanism undue wear and let the italian hard sausage and cheese sweat a few more minutes like Richard Widmark did in his first movies.
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#154942 - 11/11/08 08:03 PM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: Hikin_Jim]
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Old Hand
Registered: 10/19/06
Posts: 1013
Loc: Pacific NW, USA
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I'm always willing to add in some useless and potentialy wrong trivia to a topic like this - back in 1985-87, there was and probably still is a ban on the importation of switchblades into the US, however a one-armed person could legally import switchblades for personal use. I remember reading the reg, and was so pleased when the T/F question actually appeared on the customhouse broker's license examination the year I took it.
The other good bit from that exam had to do with cattle that roamed across a free range border were not considered illegally imported. I could imagine a smart rancher setting up his operations uphill on the Canadian side, and letting his cattle go down to the slaughterhouse under their own power.
There is the apocryphal and probably wrong story about my grandfather, who made it part of his business to import whiskey during prohibition, by rolling barrels of the stuff downhill from Canada somewhere near Buffalo. But I already digress from the switchblade topic...
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#154944 - 11/11/08 08:21 PM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: Hikin_Jim]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 03/13/05
Posts: 2322
Loc: Colorado
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It seems like non-spring-assisted and spring-assisted locking knives are generally legal, provided that they aren't concealed. Probably this varies by state. In Colorado, "a knife" is defined as something with a blade over 3-1/2", so you don't have to worry about carrying blades smaller than this, either concealed or not (but I don't know about short-bladed "assisted opening" knives - they may be different). There are exceptions to this blade length for hunting, fixed blades, etc., but 3-1/2" is about the biggest practical pocket knife so I just stick with that so I don't have to worry about it. The bigger blades do better in sheaths or holsters anyway, IMHO.
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#155083 - 11/13/08 12:10 AM
Re: Legality of a spring-assist knife
[Re: haertig]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/01/07
Posts: 2432
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And some of them have safeties on them so they don't accidentally open in your pocket. While that's a good thing, it just slows down the knife even further when you have to mess with the safety. Somewhere I remember reading a piece about how a cowboy saw a switchblade and bought it on a whim. Late getting home he was at full gallop on his horse when he was reminded of it when he heard a slight click and pressure in his pocket. Bouncing vigorously up and down on a horse with a pointy piece of steel wedged firmly into your crotch, according to his account, isn't a good thing. Made for a good story as I remember it. Safety can be a concern when a knife is designed to open automatically at the touch of a button.
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