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army knife

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A Swiss Army knife (abbreviated SAK) is a multifunction hand tool. Generally speaking, a Swiss Army knife sports a blade as well as various tools, such as screwdrivers and can openers. These attachments are stowed inside the handle of the knife through a pivot point mechanism. The handle is usually red, and features a white cross, the colors of Switzerland.

Various designs and types of Swiss Army knives exist, with different tool combinations for specific tasks. The term "Swiss Army knife" is often used synonymously with the term "pocket knife", and is also sometimes generically used to describe a tool, especially a software tool, that is a collection of special-purpose tools.

Contents

  • 1 History
    • 1.1 Origins
    • 1.2 Victorinox and Wenger
  • 2 Manufacturers
  • 3 Fame
  • 4 See also
  • 5 External links

History

A Victorinox Swiss Army knife

Origins

In 1891, Karl Elsener, then owner of a company that made surgical equipment discovered (to his dismay) that the pocket knives supplied to the Swiss Army were in fact made in Germany. Outraged, he founded the Association of Swiss Master Cutlers. Its goal was simple: Swiss knives for the Swiss Army.

Elsener began working on what was the predecessor to the modern Swiss Army knife, called the "Soldier's Knife". The original had a wooden handle (as opposed to the plastic and metal seen today), and featured a blade, a screwdriver, a can opener, and a punch. This already impressive knife was sold to the Swiss army, but Elsener was not satisfied with its first incarnation. In 1896, after 5 years of hard work, Elsener managed to put blades on both sides of the handle using a special spring mechanism, allowing him to use the same spring to hold them in place, an incredible innovation at the time. This allowed Elsener to put twice as many features on the knife; he added a second blade and a corkscrew.

Victorinox and Wenger

Elsener, through his company Victorinox, managed to have the market completely for himself until 1893, when the second industrial cutlery of Switzerland, Paul Boechat & Cie headquartered in Delémont in the French-speaking canton of Jura, started selling a similar product. This company was later acquired by its then General Manager, Theodore Wenger and renamed the Wenger Company. In 1908 the Swiss government, wanting to prevent an issue over regional favouritism but perhaps wanting a bit of competition in hopes of lowering prices, split the contract with Victorinox and Wenger each getting half of the orders placed. By mutual agreement, Wenger advertises as the Genuine Swiss Army Knife and Victorinox uses the term the Original Swiss Army Knife.

Some of the various designs produced by Victorinox.

However, on 26 April 2005 Victorinox acquired Wenger, thus turning the Swiss Army knife market into a monopoly for supplying the knives to the Swiss Army once again. However, on the consumer side Victorinox has stated that it intends to keep both brands intact.

Manufacturers

The two Swiss Army knife manufacturers, Victorinox and Wenger, together supply about 50,000 knives to the Swiss army each year. The rest of production is devoted to exports, mostly to the United States. Victorinox and Wenger SAKs can be immediately distinguished by their logos; the Victorinox cross is surrounded by a shield with bilateral symmetry, while the Wenger cross is surrounded by a slightly rounded square with quadrilateral symmetry.

There are also many other manufacturers of similar-looking multi-tool folding knives, at a wide range of price/quality points.

Fame

The Swiss Army Knife is a signature of the American TV show MacGyver, wherein MacGyver often improvises tools that are needed to solve problems. He often uses his SAK to help build mechanisms out of common items, which led to sayings such as "making a rocket out of a match box".

The Swiss Army knife has also been parodied in animated TV shows such as The Simpsons and the animated version of The Tick, in which a fictional Swiss Army squad carries backpack-sized versions of the knife.

In Eddie Izzard's performance of Glorious, he portrays the Pope's Swiss guards as being armed with SAKs, and proceeds to highlight the unusefulness of some of the tools commonly featured on them: "I don't know what this does. And with this I can open a can of beans in a week."

See also

  • Swiss dagger
  • Leatherman
  • Gerber multitool

External links

  • Victorinox manufacturer's web site
  • Wenger manufacturer's web site
  • sosakonline SOSAK is the Secret Order of Swiss Army Knife, a collectors' and users' community
  • Does the Swiss army really use the Swiss army knife? at The Straight Dope


Victorinox Swiss Army knife closed Victorinox Swiss Army knife open Wenger Swiss Army knife open

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "swiss army knife".