Starting with the 91mm 4 layer knife package that suits me for EDC...
The Huntsman and its variants seem to be a good start. This is the Huntsman Plus, which adds the tiny screwdriver, straight pin, and pen to the package:
The Fieldmaster, AKA the BSA Huntsman, replaces the corkscrew with the large Phillips screwdriver. Since both the corkscrew and the mini screwdriver are important to me, I’ll stick with modifying the Huntsman Plus, but this variant may interest some:
As stated, I'll start with the Huntsman Plus. Changes I would like to see to this model:
1. Main blade shaped as a drop point.
2. Second blade lengthened as much as possible and shaped like a clipped point – very long convex clip, to make this a slender “splinter-lifter” and “small game” style blade.
3. Ruler marks on the woodsaw: 0 – 5 cm on one side and 0 - 2 inches (preferably with 1/10 sub divisions, but 1/16 OK) on the other. The max would be about 6 cm / 2.5 inches and those are neither handy nor could the zero marks be at very usable positions, so I opt for the 50mm / 2 inches marks, positioned closer to the end of the saw blade.
4. I think I’d like the tip width of the screwdriver blade reduced slightly. It seems large for some tasks and tempts one to put way too much torque on the blade. I’m hoping for some specific dialog on this as I haven’t really thought this part through yet.
5. Modify the “small” screwdriver tip on the can opener blade to be a flat Phillips driver similar to the micra as large as possible without compromising the can opener.
6. The reamer is frequently called an “awl”. It is not an awl; it is a borer-reamer. It’s a terrible awl (I’ve used it as one) and a pretty versatile reamer in my experience. If anyone knows what its original purpose was (cleaning out a pipe stem???), please sing out… but it is useful often enough that I’d leave it. OK – there are times when I wish it made a smaller diameter hole, so maybe it should be made slimmer. I can more easily increase the diameter of a hole than decrease it…
7. … Which leads me to the parcel hook. Huh? Modify/change this as follows: Make this a bonafide awl – sure, put a thread hole in it (say, large enough to readily take an inner strand from 550 cord), but make it an real awl. I don’t care if it’s round, oval, or rectangular in cross section, but it should simply pierce a hole in cloth, plastic, canvas, leather, etc and NOT have a cutting edge(s). Also, I think that careful attention to the tip could give us a hybrid: the tip could be made to function as a small or tiny Phillips driver while retaining its piercing ability. I understand that simply modifying the existing hook will make it difficult to raise the awl out of storage, so that must be factored in. One suggestion is to make it slightly curved almost like a sail maker’s needle so the shape itself forms a “nail nick” about mid-point. No cutting edges, just a piercing point. Victorinox can figure this out without my help, I’m sure.
8. I am neutral on the toothpick, so it can go if it’s in the way of the next several items. Ditto the ballpoint pen.
9. Replace the straight pin with two or more sewing needles. Three would be great: A moderately large Sharps with a big eye, a very large ballpoint (we have an awl, remember) with an eye large enough to take an inner strand of 550 cord, and as large a curved “sail maker’s” needle as can be snaked in around the studs. Mount the sharps in a plastic carrier that looks suspiciously like a modified toothpick, mount the ballpoint needle in a similar carrier (probably made from spring steel), and mount the curved needle by friction points molded into the inside of the cellidor scale. Oh – just for kicks, magnetize the straight needles – perhaps mold a small rare earth magnet into the scale to hold/help hold needles in place AND re-magnetize as they are sheathed/unsheathed. Orient the magnet so the points of the needles will polarize to point North. FWIW, the current ballpoint pen might be modified to retain the pen function and also serve fairly well as a large ballpoint needle by adding an eye to it - but I am after the needle function in any event - the pen function would be laignape.
10. Inset a metal dimple somewhere on on scale to serve as a needle-pusher, since we don't have a thimble. I gravitate to a location near one end, opposite side from the next item, because I think putting it in the center will tempt a puncture wound to the palm from a slip.
11. At the end away from the lanyard ring, something that will necessitate thickening a scale slightly: a sparking wheel assembly that uses standard lighter flints. It should be on a removable carrier to allow changing flints and if possible the carrier should have one or more spare flints clipped in (I can use the tiny screwdriver to pry them out). Design it to be used to create aimed sparks in the stowed position. This is the most challenging modification I’d like to see – the others are intrinsically feasible. If this is simply impossible, then mount an oval or rectangular cross section ferrocerrium sparking rod of usable length in that end.
12. Let’s look at this model:
This is an Altimeter Plus. It’s essentially another Huntsman variant at first glance. Lose the watch/barometer/thermometer, and we have… a Huntsman with an additional screwdriver termed a “fine” screwdriver. Oooooh! I want that on my “ETS” knife! This is a 4 layer knife, so there is no reason to deny this. While we’re at it, make it a fine toothed file on one side (nails, if nothing else, but make it hard enough to touch metal) and put a couple of diamond-dust hook and needle sharpening grooves on the opposite sides – no need to bother facing the entire side with diamond dust, but that would be OK. Alternatively, the tip could be a wood “chisel” or it could be ground dual-purpose like Leatherman screwdriver tips.
13. What’s missing? A file/hone; ideally a de-mountable one with medium and fine diamond on the sides, metal file on one edge, diamond hook/needle groove on the spine, and a removable standard triangular carbide tool bit on the tip (as a scribe, glass scratcher, etc). But to retain everything else, we would have to go to a 5 layer knife. If Victorinox would do this, even if it is not demountable, I would surrender the scissors. Otherwise, keep the scissors. Heck, I’d even consider a 5 layer knife…
I’ll post some thoughts about a 111mm knife later this weekend.
Let the debates begin...
Regards,
Tom