Lightweight Multiool w/Scissors

Joined
Aug 15, 2012
Messages
511
Location
SW Utah
Hi all,

I've got it in my head that a smaller locking knife with a set of scissors would be great in the bino harness. Any good recommendations? It seems to me that most are way too heavy or don't have a decent knife on them.

Thanks for any leads!
 
My fav is the Gerber Dime. Mini scissors, bottle opener, backup knife blade, box opener (which I use WAY more than you'd think), tweezers (ticks, splinters...) pliers (crappy but functional), two screwdrivers, and a small nail file. 2.2oz and $20 most weeks on the 'zon. Honestly, I never carry anything bigger any longer. I always have some kind of EDC or hunting knife for my real blade and this does everything else.
 
Justin’s first pic may be a BHBT multi tool ?? Found on Aliexpress.
I also saw the Roxon that he posted and a Boker Plus version that I could not locate on any site.

Good luck with your search
 
Curious why sissors.
I know they can be used for something but in 35 years of messing in the woods I can always get it done with a knife.
Same with a leatherman wave,just to heavy for the 10% percent use.
I carry a knife and small ultra light silky or a knife and a small sak with a saw in possibles pouch.
 
Scissors suck on most these tools for any real cutting.

I found a real small pair of Fiskars at WM that are actually handy.
 
Curious why sissors.
I know they can be used for something but in 35 years of messing in the woods I can always get it done with a knife.
Same with a leatherman wave,just to heavy for the 10% percent use.
I carry a knife and small ultra light silky or a knife and a small sak with a saw in possibles pouch.
They aren't an every-day item while I'm hunting, although I do find myself using them at least once or twice a year. They're a little better suited for trimming nails or mutant eyelashes, cutting off ankle tape, and that kind of thing. But my Dime is also an EDC item, whether I'm home or hunting, and scissors do have a lot of uses off trail. When you get to a restaurant after a show it's a lot less alarming cutting off the plastic admissions bracelet with a small pair of scissors than a 5" fixed blade. 😀

I do also like always having a box opener, which I use while hunting to cut things like paracord (and keep my main blade from dulling). It's amazing for opening those awful plastic clamshell packages at home, too - much easier than scissors and safer than a knife. And I use the tweezers at least a few times a month no matter where I am, mostly for splinters.
 
Leatherman Micra

They cut way better than the "add-on" scissors that fold out of the handle on most multi-tools, and also have a knife, tweezers, file, and a variety of screwdrivers. 1.8oz so not much of a weight penalty.
 
Curious why sissors.
I know they can be used for something but in 35 years of messing in the woods I can always get it done with a knife.
Same with a leatherman wave,just to heavy for the 10% percent use.
I carry a knife and small ultra light silky or a knife and a small sak with a saw in possibles pouch.
I hear you, I just like the slightly different functionality they offer.
 
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My dad always had a set of this style in his pocket growing up:


Might just go with that and a small folder/fixed blade as a backup to my bigger knife that rides in the pack. It seems like you compromise too much for my liking on either the scissors of the knife with any of the combo units. . .
 
Check out the Gerber Armbar. I’ve been carrying the scout version in my harness. There’s also the drive model which has scissors as well.
 
Are the tools of decent quality on these? I've seen some good and some less good from Gerber. . .
Was worried the same when I bought it but the quality on mine is no different than the two Leatherman I own. It’s come in handy a couple of times when I haven’t had my pack with me.
 
Are the tools of decent quality on these? I've seen some good and some less good from Gerber. . .
I have an Armbar Drive. I keep it in my camper kitchen drawer as a general around-camp tool. I'd say it's one of their stouter/more rugged multi-tools, but also a little confusing. IMO:

1. The 1/4-hex driver works really well, BUT there's no bit storage and you need a very short bit (1" max I think) if you want the holder itself to fold properly. I just keep the phillips/flat combo in there that it came with, but I wish there was room somewhere to store 1 more - I have lots of square- and torx-head screws around my camper, so I never reach for this tool.

2. The bottle opener is a kind of weird pivot-to-open deal that you don't notice from some photos. It works, but it's very shallow and kind of clumsy to use. The bottle opener element also doubles as a hammer/striking head, but it's not very good at it. I'd never use it as a hammer. It does, however, work reasonably well as a pry bar - if you have anything to pry. You can't pull a nail with it (it only has a working travel of about 1/4"), but it might get one started out.

3. The scissors are probably the longest/largest in terms of blade length on any multi-tool I've tried. If scissors are your jam, this is the cake.

4. The knife blade is a drop-point, which isn't my favorite shape but works fine. It can be opened one-handed but it's not very smooth so you have to be careful not to let your thumb roll down onto the blade as you open it. You can't "flick" it open. It's a liner-lock, and a very secure one, but is easy to close one-handed. Mine came mostly razor-sharp - not quite shaving sharp and it feels a bit jagged if you carve paper, but sharp enough to be ready to use out of the box for most purposes. Hey, it's a multitool.

5. For some reason they decided to include the most useless awl of any multitool I've owned. It's sharp as heck but SUPER short so it's hard to use even if you want to. Personally I do not understand the fascination with awls on these things. Who the hell sews leather out in the field? It's not like it has a slot for a needle and thread. Apropos the original post, I think awls are way more useless than scissors, anyway.

At 3.1oz this isn't my go-to for any kind of EDC, whether in daily life or hunting. It's too heavy, bulky, and inefficient (no tweezers or other desirable hike/hunt oriented tools) to justify carrying in the field, and each of the tools it does have is somehow not quite worth the weight there. How many phillips screws are you really driving while you're hunting? And for home use, your kitchen shears, regular screwdrivers, and (presumably) EDC pocket knife are going to outperform what this thing does. It does look cool but other than that, I personally would recommend something else.
 
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