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Recommend me a keychain knife

ive

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Mar 8, 2011
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Canada
Hi all. Looking for a small keychain knife. Something well made.

thank you.
 
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BTL-A4

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Santa Clarita
I like my little Swiss Army knife. Has a knife, scissors, toothpick, tweezers, and screwdriver/nail file.

You might want to consider telling us more about what you plan to use it for.
 

Dave455

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Mar 19, 2013
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Sussex, England
Well, if you want well made, by which I assume you want well ground blades, THE keychain knife has probably always been the Victorinox Classic. Decent steel, decently ground and nicely put together.

The problem is, whichever version of the Classic you get (even the alox version shown) if you keep it in a pocket with keys, the keys will destroy the finish. Pretty much the same with any decent knife you keep on a keychain.

The only thing that will withstand that (to a degree) are metal scales, preferably stainless steel. Some of the cheaper / smaller Spyderco’s are an option, but many are Chinese and probably won’t tick the “well made” box.

How about a Leatherman Micra. I find the small scissors more rugged than a small knife (though you have that as well, albeit not a great one), they are very compact when closed, and quite durable.C62305D4-BEB9-48A1-B2E6-5BB2E2E4F2D3.jpeg5B9BB6CE-9F79-4CCC-8E9F-FAD26556B22B.jpeg
 

liliysdad

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Jul 18, 2008
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Never understood the purpose of these things, other than a novelty or to clean fingernails.

I've never once used my pocket knife and thought, "man, I wish a wad of keys was attached to this, that would make this much better!!”
 

dar24601

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May 24, 2016
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Central Coast, California
Never understood the purpose of these things, other than a novelty or to clean fingernails.

I've never once used my pocket knife and thought, "man, I wish a wad of keys was attached to this, that would make this much better!!”
Workplace restrictions are why I have one. Also have a victorinox jet setter when I fly. Yeah not the most ideal but something better than nothing
 

PCustoms

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Jul 23, 2011
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VT
Workplace restrictions are why I have one. Also have a victorinox jet setter when I fly. Yeah not the most ideal but something better than nothing
I had to Google that....

Can you bring that to a fight with a bulletless gun?
 

ajchien

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Sep 3, 2010
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Location
Los Angeles, stuck on the 60 freeway.
My favorite to attach to a keychain is a Victorinox Rambler. It’s basically the same thing as a Victorinox Classic except it adds a Phillips screwdriver that works on p1/p2 screws. I also have had the leatherman micra on my keychain at one time, which wound up being a bit too heavy for my preference. The leatherman style ps and cs I’ve had for a while, but I found the handles to be terribly uncomfortable. Basically, I’d have to say for something useful yet unobstrusive added to the keychain, any of the small victorinox choices are good.

With that said, my current carry is a spyderco dragonfly paired with a victorinox evogrip 14.
 

GeoBruin

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May 5, 2018
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I carry a full size knife in my pocket 24/7/365 and I still have a Leatherman Micra on my keys because its so handy. The little SAKs are also useful, just not quite as much so IMO.
 

bassJAM

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Jun 10, 2020
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Cincinnati, OH
Where in the world do you work where you can't carry a pocket knife?

A lot of the manufacturing sites I've been in won't let anyone carry a knife for safety reasons, every time I pull out my pocket knife they all huddle around to block it's view and whisper "don't let management see that!". They're stuck with these if they need to cut something:

1626878341014.png
 

liliysdad

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Jul 18, 2008
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A lot of the manufacturing sites I've been in won't let anyone carry a knife for safety reasons, every time I pull out my pocket knife they all huddle around to block it's view and whisper "don't let management see that!". They're stuck with these if they need to cut something:

1626878341014.png
I have never heard of such a policy. Very interesting...and ridiculous.
 
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bassJAM

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Cincinnati, OH
I have to second (or third) that the Victorinox Classic or Spyderco Ladybug are likely the best options. Go with the Spyderco if you want a knife you're going to abuse, it's going to hold up to prying and heavy use better, plus the VG10 blade will hold an edge a little longer than Victorinox's "surgical stainless" does. But the V. Classic is great if you think you'll need the tweezers or scissors, and the Rambler adds a bottle opener and phillips but get's slightly wider to add that extra tool.
 

RTM

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May 13, 2019
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SF Bay Area
I have a Spyderco C133p (bug) and C137p (honeybee), but prefer by Gerber Micro LST for my EDC. Prefer the lock back, and the overall shape feels better. The plastic scales seem to hide in the pocket easier.

The Victorinox small knives, in all their flavors, is too thick for my pocket, and too fiddly to open the blades. I keep one in my desk, and in my car, in their slip case, for when I need the scissors, tweezers, or Phillips driver. But never in my pocket.

The Victorinox Excelsior will get carried loose in a pocket, occasionally, based on expected need for the longer blade. The medium and large knives will go in a backpack or shoulder bag, or ride in a toolbox

And none are ever on a keyring, always loose in the pocket
 

Hotrod33809

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Mar 24, 2021
Messages
35
Location
TN
I'm have the Leatherman squirt ps4 not solely a knife but it has saved me more than a couple times and because of that I leave it on the keys even though I may go a few weeks without ever opening it.
 

RTM

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May 13, 2019
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13,114
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SF Bay Area
It’s true. I worked at a place where even box cutters were prohibited. We were issued plastic scissors.
After 2 or 3 safety incidents with nerve damage to fingers after box cutter incidents, they tend to react severely.
 

CS454

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Oct 10, 2014
Messages
668
After 2 or 3 safety incidents with nerve damage to fingers after box cutter incidents, they tend to react severely.
Last place I worked we had one winner cut Synflex against his thigh with a fully extended Olfa. Safety cutters for all after that.
 

liliysdad

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Jul 18, 2008
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5,383
I can see making you use work provided blades for work activities, but barring the ability to even carry a regular pocket knife is bonkers to me.

When some professions pay their employees to carry a gun, banning knives just seems silly.
 

BTL-A4

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Feb 28, 2018
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Santa Clarita
I have never heard of such a policy. Very interesting...and ridiculous.
My grandfather was a millwright. He tells a story about how, at a steel mill, the rollers got messed up. While all the big wigs in fancy suits were standing around trying to figure out what happened, he, dressed in his work clothes, asked one of the workers what happened. Turns out someone had dropped a pocket knife and, being hardened steel, caused the rollers to get messed up. That $20 knife shut down a multi-million dollar steel rolling mill because someone wasn't careful. I think they had to get new bearings or something. This may be one reason they don't allow knives.
 

Jersey Drew

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Sep 13, 2020
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210
Location
NJ
I’ve had both sized sog microns on my key chain. They have both been fantastic. Only problem is sharpening the tanto style. Luckily they are cheap enough you can replace them often.
 

Indexmill

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Apr 12, 2013
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Location
Central NC
Many industries require box cutters with ceramic blades as they cut cardboard better than steel and do NOT cut flesh as well as steel.
 
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