View allAll Photos Tagged multitool

now with 300 grams underneath my butt:

* spare tube

* patch kit

* multitool

* spoke wrench

* chain tool

* tire levers

Dad warned me about these cacti. He told the story of his road trip with mom across the southwest in the 70s, and how they came across these unforgiving cacti. Mom noticed a beautiful flower and put her finger out to touch it. A jumping cactus like this one latched onto her finger and wouldn't let go. She got histerical and cried for dad to take it off. Dad wisely got some newspaper and slowly pulled it off to avoid getting stuck himself.

 

In my case, I didn't know what the "jumping cactus" actually looked like, so when I saw a few roundish cacti on the ground like this one, I was curious. I carefully grabbed one of the spines to get a better look at it. The crazy part was, and the reason they get their name, another nearby spine stuck into my finger. It just got worse from there.

 

Natural reaction to sudden pain is to pull away, but because the spines have microscopic barbs and tips that curve on contact with moisture from the underlayer of your skin, the spine stuck into me and stayed in. So when I pulled away, the spines held on, and the rest of the cactus swung back into my hand, sticking even more spines into my palm and fingers.

 

To get the spines out, you really need pliers or a multitool. I had neither, so I used two sturdy sticks to pry the spines out of my skin one-by-one. A painfully messy experience.

 

Gates Pass Trail,

Tucson Mountain Park

Unnamed next to the new Climber..

 

The 1971 SAK two layer edc has a scalloped dent and rise in the Scales just near the Toothpick and twizzers.

 

It has scissors, large blade and multi tool screwdriver and wire stripper, Bo the smaller than on a Tinker or Climber..

The older one does not have a lock at right angles position.

 

All the tools you need to hack/fix/disassemble most electronic things (laptop, digital camera, vex robots, celphone, nintendo, etc). All tools fit in small pelican 1050 case.

Birthday present from Traci. Now, if someone else would give me another multi-tool so I could get the package on this open, I'd be set. I mean, how the hell am I going to get this open? Drill, band saw, plasma laser?

 

Swiss Army tool kit. About the size of a credit card. I keep this in my camera bag.

 

More and hi-resolution images available at my website www.creativescans.com/

magnetic stowage

Up at the village of Nyame Bekyere, cutting casava with the universal 'cutlass'. The cutlass is used for everything, from doing the vegies, mowing the grass, digging holes, clearing the farm, hunting, even chopping down large trees (eventually) and so much more.

The ultimate 'multitool' with one blade to do everything...

I'm getting a bit frustrated as I can't seem to recall many names now, and of course I didn't write any down.

 

Want more info on being a volunteer? Go to...

www.youngpeacebrigades.org/

 

Axe / hammer / bowsaw multitool

Got my wife this for Mother's Day. I bought one that was in great condition but had a jacked up sheath and one that was a bit worn looking (scratches and dull blade) but had a decent sheath. So now we have his and hers Flairs. Win win!¡! This one has date codes 1099 on one handle and 1199 on the other.

Joseph Rodgers & Sons WW2 two peice clasp Knife, dated 1943

Leatherman Tread bracelet

Choose your future.

Choose Old Bleach.

Choose a bike, choose a pedal, choose clubmates,

Choose a f*cking expensive wheelset, Choose

washing your club kit, tyres, GPS units and

Campagnolo bottle openers. Choose good

health, low cholesterol and a decent helmet.

Choose to remortgage the house to buy a bike with

Di2 on it. Choose club kit and matching panniers,

Choose a saddle on hire purchase in a range of

f*cking fabrics, Choose a multitool and wonder

what the f*ck you're doing

fixing a flat tyre on a

Sunday morning.

Choose sitting on the

couch watching mind-

numbing, spirit-

crushing endless

hours of Tour de

France stages,

stuffing f*cking

energy gels into

your mouth.

Choose riding away

at 9-30am in the

p*shing rain,

nothing more than

a lightweight jacket

to keep you from an

embarrassing loss

in a fight with the

elements.

German brass fish 4 function multitool

Heck of lot of sanding and detail sanding. Used a dremel multitool. Wished I had a Fein. Neither here nor there, three coats of indoor satin poly and the chest currently holds our bedroom TV. Not bad for $50. All solid red oak, no veneer anywhere.

 

(One very slight eh, error. See it)?

Light weight (4.4 oz), small, sturdy, and with a plethora of useful tools.

Scraped out the inside of a flat 4, and taken the edge off it. Tools used were a very sharp leatherman multitool, bit of aluminium oxide paper and a needle file.

Is it even made-in-Britain, maybe, no one knows

Gerber Legend

Leatherman Charge TTi

SOG Powerplier

January 26th, 2016

 

Reading materials, pants pockets and other miscellaneous junk on my nightstand.

 

Project 365! - 2016 - Day 026

Preparing for a long bike ride. I was aiming at my first 100 miler, but stopped at 58 miles after slogging about 10+ miles through constant headwinds and rolling hills. Temps started off great (up into the 40s!), but dropped as the day went on.

 

The photo shows off my over-packing genes. This will be paired down in warmer weather. In the photo:

 

- Camelback Mule

- Some Clif Bars (not all went with)

- Hammer Gel and Hammer Perpetum

- Two extra water bottles

- Sunglasses

- Waterproof case

- iPhone, shuffle + headphones, money, license, and debit card

- Toe warmers

- First aid + tape

- Arm warmers

- Extra shirt

- Gloves

- Extra stocking cap

- Pump

- Spare tube

- Extra rear light, headlamp and battery

- Saddle bag with a spare tub, tire levers, CO2, patch kit, multitool

- Road ID and reflective band

- Chapstick

Red Gum, Australian Native Aged Malt

And my SAKAlox Pioneer X and #3627 Alok Farmer X

1 2 ••• 31 32 34 36 37 ••• 79 80