Different cutting tool?

Posted by: Craig

Different cutting tool? - 09/24/01 05:33 PM

Given that even nail clippers are being confiscated at airport, I was thinking that we could use a new kind of cutting tool. One that doesn't look like a knife and one that isn't made of metal. An idea popped into my head. I'm no engineer, so I don't know if this is even possible.<br><br>I was thinking of a round, smallish piece of ceramic that would fit on a keyring. The ceramic would not give metal detectors any grief and the medallion shape wouldn't scream "knife" to security. The entire thing could be sharpened and would function much like a pizza slicer, but with a modified grip. Then if you really needed a knife, you could "pretend" to make use of a handy object for that purpose.<br><br>What do you folks think?<br><br>
Posted by: Chris Kavanaugh

Re: Different cutting tool? - 09/24/01 06:55 PM

You would have to acquire firing clay without any elements of metal in it, which many have. When treespiking was in favor, bridge nails were easily detected and removed. The more creative activists created ceramic dowels of specific clay, fired at high temps.Of course, you could get a length of bamboo. these make wickedly sharp knives among native peoples in the tropics. See the bizaar , perverse and esoteric stuff we know here? I have a survival suggestion. Buy a pizza and rethink this on a full stomach. I can never get those cutting wheels to work. Im just tossing my BOB in cargo and hoping our security remains at the present level.<br><br>
Posted by: Craig

Re: Different cutting tool? - 09/24/01 07:57 PM

Oh well, another idea down the drain. Grin. I like your pizza suggestion, though. Time for dinner. Yum.<br><br>
Posted by: Chris Kavanaugh

Re: Different cutting tool? - 09/24/01 09:03 PM

Craig, better to bounce ideas, gas masksand MRE's ( meals rarily edible) here than off a Grizzly Bear in the real world.<br><br>
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/14/01 12:44 AM

SwissTech UtilKey is on my key ring. I've flown twice since the sharps rule started and no one has said anything. <br><br>It's tiny. I wouldn't want it for a weapon, but [censored] it's sharp. Also has the hardest eyeglass screwdriver tip I've ever used.<br><br><br>
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 06:54 AM

Here are the closest things I could come up with?<br><br>http://www.clicshop.com/magasin/solumark/c46206p9504973.2.html<br><br>http://members.tripod.com/~Newt_Livesay/SPECIALS (check executive ice scraper)<br><br>GATOR<br><br>
Posted by: Craig

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 12:24 PM

Great ideas.<br><br>Regarding this, http://www.clicshop.com/magasin/solumark/c46206p9504973.2.html. What IS it, anyway? <br><br>I like the executive ice scraper, but if it were found on your person, what could you honestly claim it was? What all could it be used for? I stink at being evasive unless I can base an evasion on the truth.
Posted by: Craig

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 12:30 PM

I also keep my Utilikey on my keyring. I guess I'll keep it there and forget I have it. Where did you put your keys for the screening, in your jacket pocket and put the jacket on the conveyer belt?<br><br>What's up with the "[censored]" business? First time I've seen that on this forum.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 01:37 PM

The sale of ceramic knives should go up. What will stop these from getting through the detector except maybe a body search? Works good, lasts a long time.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 03:16 PM

I hope this thread isn't becoming a place to encourage law-breaking relative to the "no knives on airplanes" regulation. We may not agree with the law, but we are obligated to obey it, and I would not want to participate in a forum that discusses ways to smuggle contraband through security checkpoints.<br><br>Let's keep in mind that we are communicating in a public fourm visible to the world. That includes minors, law-enforcement agents, terrorists, foreign neighbors, employers, etc. What is posted here reflects on all members of the forum. I would encourage those interested in pursuing this topic further to use e-mail.<br><br>Thanks.
Posted by: Doug_Ritter

Re: "[censored]" business? - 10/15/01 04:03 PM

Craig,<br><br>This is a family forum. If you review the Forum Rules and Courtesies at http://www.equipped.org/rules.htm you will find that "obscene or otherwise undesirable language are inappropriate." The forum software incorporates a "badwords" filter that will automagically replace any of a half dozen (currently) commonly used, but unacceptable words or phrases with the censored tag. This serves to protect our Family Friendly ratings and you or I when we slip up inadvertantly.
Posted by: Neanderthal

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/15/01 06:23 PM

AMEN !!!! Well stated, CastAway!
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/16/01 07:47 AM

I have no idea. what exactly it is? smile Probably the first thing I found on google. <br><br>I agree there will be no further discussion. However most companies that sell any sort of "ceramics" now require LE id number, some have quit altogether! Others still take orders and report them to local law enforcement! I will edit my previous post. <br><br>GATOR
Posted by: Craig

Re: "[censored]" business? - 10/16/01 12:12 PM

I picked up a swearing habit in college. I have since made it a firm point to think before I speak when I'm out in the public, such as at work. Which is a good habit even if you don't normally swear. I found that hesitating for a moment or two before opening my big fat mouth is a live-saver. If I find swearing to be appropriate to a post, I simply enter "expletive deleted."
Posted by: Craig

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/16/01 12:16 PM

There is no reason to edit your post. Such items are available to anyone who looks around. I myself found a small pocketknife that looks exactly like a normal key. Would blend in perfectly on your keyring. Am I going to buy it? No. Souls braver - or more foolish? - than I might very well think differently.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/19/01 04:06 PM

I think we're looking at this problem the wrong way.<br><br>The objective is to have tools at hand that are useful in a survival scenario, but which cannot be used as weapons, either to intimidate or cause bodily harm.<br><br>Knives are out, period. So the problem requires a little out-of-the-box thinking. My plan for "safe" cutting tools on aircraft:<br>1. Heavy duty paramedic shears. These can do a lot of serious work, but they're useless as a weapon (designed to NOT cut the patient), and are recognizable items to security/police types and flight staff. They're part of my first aid gear, so they're in an appropriate context. As well, they're also cheap enough to abandon with a smile if security insists. (I prefer to grind off the "slider" portion at the end of the bottom blade, making a perfect blunt half-moon to match the top; they're more versatile this way.)<br>2. A six-inch reciprocating saw blade (get a thicker "demolition blade," metal cutting variety, in the finest tooth size available). I grind and sand both ends to a half-moon shape that's comfortable in my palm. It really can't be used as a weapon, there's no point, there's no sharp edge, but it can cut and shape almost any material with a bit of patience, and used by hand it's quite indestructible. Security never even checked this one before 9-11, and I think you can make a reasonable case for it today.<br>3. Other useful related items. A diamond file (quite coarse) to shape materials in a longer-term situation, a 4-inch vise grip as improvised handle, and leather gloves to protect hands from rough handles and materials.<br><br>Does this sound like a rational alternative?
Posted by: Craig

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/19/01 07:16 PM

Absolutely it sounds rational. <br><br>After I thought about it for a bit, I came up with the idea of EMT shears myself. Even divers are using these now. Blunt ends, obviously medically oriented. I'm sold. Has anyone tried packing these with their first-aid kit in their carry-on yet?<br><br>I'm also looking for a small pair of Vise-Grips.<br><br>Don't have anything to grind a reciprocating saw blade with, so that's probably out.
Posted by: Anonymous

Re: Different cutting tool? - 10/21/01 05:25 PM

Actually, you can shape a recipro blade with an ordinary file. Mostly you need to take off the pointy bits used to attach it to the power saw. It's only the hardened teeth that you can't file down.