Crap Gadgets
We wanted a monkey butler and bought one off eBay. Imagine our surprise when we found it was just an ordinary monkey with rabies. Worse: It had no butler training at all. Tell us about your duff technology purchases.
Thanks to Moonbadger for the suggestion
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 12:51)
We wanted a monkey butler and bought one off eBay. Imagine our surprise when we found it was just an ordinary monkey with rabies. Worse: It had no butler training at all. Tell us about your duff technology purchases.
Thanks to Moonbadger for the suggestion
( , Thu 29 Sep 2011, 12:51)
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They're illegal?
Are the little Leatherman tools OK? I carry a titchy Leatherman Squirt in my pocket everywhere. It's been incredibly useful.
I had one confiscated at Jersey airport years ago as the woman at customs seriously believed I would be able to hijack the plane with a blade that is just over an inch long.
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:00, 1 reply)
Are the little Leatherman tools OK? I carry a titchy Leatherman Squirt in my pocket everywhere. It's been incredibly useful.
I had one confiscated at Jersey airport years ago as the woman at customs seriously believed I would be able to hijack the plane with a blade that is just over an inch long.
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:00, 1 reply)
As far as I am aware.
It is illegal to carry any knife with a locking blade in the UK, unless you have "good reason" -- which would usually mean you're a farmer in your field cutting things or a fisherman using a heavy line.
I don't have time for a proper google, but this is pretty much how I read the relevant laws last time I found them online:
www.goxplore.net/guides/Knife_law_%28UK%29#Carrying_Knives_in_Public
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:04, closed)
It is illegal to carry any knife with a locking blade in the UK, unless you have "good reason" -- which would usually mean you're a farmer in your field cutting things or a fisherman using a heavy line.
I don't have time for a proper google, but this is pretty much how I read the relevant laws last time I found them online:
www.goxplore.net/guides/Knife_law_%28UK%29#Carrying_Knives_in_Public
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:04, closed)
Its a shit law
My friend was hiking and was stopped and searched by the police, in his hiking rucksack along with his tent, cooking equipment, sleeping bag etc. they found a lockknife. They arrested him, took him to the station, cautioned him and took the knife. Apparently "I'm hiking/camping and wanted a knife that won't accidentally close on my fingers" is not a "good reason"
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:22, closed)
My friend was hiking and was stopped and searched by the police, in his hiking rucksack along with his tent, cooking equipment, sleeping bag etc. they found a lockknife. They arrested him, took him to the station, cautioned him and took the knife. Apparently "I'm hiking/camping and wanted a knife that won't accidentally close on my fingers" is not a "good reason"
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 14:22, closed)
The length is irrelevant, as far as I can tell.
The three inch rule is for pocket knives -- which must fold without any resistance and not be locked open. A lock knife is classed as fixed-blade knife, all of which are illegal to carry without the aforementioned "good reason".
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 17:28, closed)
The three inch rule is for pocket knives -- which must fold without any resistance and not be locked open. A lock knife is classed as fixed-blade knife, all of which are illegal to carry without the aforementioned "good reason".
( , Fri 30 Sep 2011, 17:28, closed)
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