Old farts and friction folders.

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Here is my Svord.
731B33EB-6A66-4407-AA92-5D7523EFE79B_1_105_c.jpeg

If you notice, there's a scorched little chunk missing from the blade.
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Funny-ish story of how it got there:
I was sharpening this on my electrical mini-belt Worksharp sharpener, when its motor burnt out. I went onto the Worksharp website and did a customer service chat. It was actually great customer service as they offered to send me a new unit, no problem. Except to prove that mine had stopped working and was useless, I needed to send them a photo of my burnt out unit with its power cord cut off. "No problem." I said to myself "After all, I do have a knife within reach."
So I took my Svord and easily cut the power cord - is what I would say had I not forgotten that the power cord was still plugged into the wall outlet! One loud and bright flash later, and the Svord had a little chunk vaporized away (at least I think).
I am not electrical engineer, but I tend to believe that the plastic handle of this knife saved me from a decent amount of electrocution. I don't think a standard wall outlet has enough juice to kill a man, but based on what it did to my blade, I am not so sure.
 
Here is my Svord.
View attachment 3087376

If you notice, there's a scorched little chunk missing from the blade.
View attachment 3087377

Funny-ish story of how it got there:
I was sharpening this on my electrical mini-belt Worksharp sharpener, when its motor burnt out. I went onto the Worksharp website and did a customer service chat. It was actually great customer service as they offered to send me a new unit, no problem. Except to prove that mine had stopped working and was useless, I needed to send them a photo of my burnt out unit with its power cord cut off. "No problem." I said to myself "After all, I do have a knife within reach."
So I took my Svord and easily cut the power cord - is what I would say had I not forgotten that the power cord was still plugged into the wall outlet! One loud and bright flash later, and the Svord had a little chunk vaporized away (at least I think).
I am not electrical engineer, but I tend to believe that the plastic handle of this knife saved me from a decent amount of electrocution. I don't think a standard wall outlet has enough juice to kill a man, but based on what it did to my blade, I am not so sure.
Great knife! Better story!! 😄
 
Here is my Svord.
View attachment 3087376

If you notice, there's a scorched little chunk missing from the blade.
View attachment 3087377

Funny-ish story of how it got there:
I was sharpening this on my electrical mini-belt Worksharp sharpener, when its motor burnt out. I went onto the Worksharp website and did a customer service chat. It was actually great customer service as they offered to send me a new unit, no problem. Except to prove that mine had stopped working and was useless, I needed to send them a photo of my burnt out unit with its power cord cut off. "No problem." I said to myself "After all, I do have a knife within reach."
So I took my Svord and easily cut the power cord - is what I would say had I not forgotten that the power cord was still plugged into the wall outlet! One loud and bright flash later, and the Svord had a little chunk vaporized away (at least I think).
I am not electrical engineer, but I tend to believe that the plastic handle of this knife saved me from a decent amount of electrocution. I don't think a standard wall outlet has enough juice to kill a man, but based on what it did to my blade, I am not so sure.
Plenty of amps there to kill you...🤔.....Doesn't take much...4-5 will do it and most house breakers or fuses are 15 minimum to wall outlets...round here in NYSHITTY anyway..😉....

Luck and ignorance are a two way.street sometimes......
Happy you're still breathing.....😉
 
Plenty of amps there to kill you...🤔.....Doesn't take much...4-5 will do it and most house breakers or fuses are 15 minimum to wall outlets...round here in NYSHITTY anyway..😉....

Luck and ignorance are a two way.street sometimes......
Happy you're still breathing.....😉
Thanks - hey, you’re in NYC? So am I!
 
Plenty of amps there to kill you...🤔.....Doesn't take much...4-5 will do it and most house breakers or fuses are 15 minimum to wall outlets...round here in NYSHITTY anyway..😉....

Luck and ignorance are a two way.street sometimes......
Happy you're still breathing.....😉
Mens Abdita Mens Abdita said "Thanks - hey, you’re in NYC? So am I!"

My condolances to both gents.

my last load out of the NYC metro area picked up in Jamaca, NY. (AKA: "JFK International Airport").
It took over 8 hours to reach NJ via the JW bridge. (roughly 5 miles)
They had the lower level closed resurfacing, so everyone had to use the upper level.
Too many "people" and/or "humans" on that island. 🤨
I prefer under 40,000 populations cities. TBH 1600 of them in one city is plenty. 😇
 
Here is my Svord.
View attachment 3087376

If you notice, there's a scorched little chunk missing from the blade.
View attachment 3087377

Funny-ish story of how it got there:
I was sharpening this on my electrical mini-belt Worksharp sharpener, when its motor burnt out. I went onto the Worksharp website and did a customer service chat. It was actually great customer service as they offered to send me a new unit, no problem. Except to prove that mine had stopped working and was useless, I needed to send them a photo of my burnt out unit with its power cord cut off. "No problem." I said to myself "After all, I do have a knife within reach."
So I took my Svord and easily cut the power cord - is what I would say had I not forgotten that the power cord was still plugged into the wall outlet! One loud and bright flash later, and the Svord had a little chunk vaporized away (at least I think).
I am not electrical engineer, but I tend to believe that the plastic handle of this knife saved me from a decent amount of electrocution. I don't think a standard wall outlet has enough juice to kill a man, but based on what it did to my blade, I am not so sure.
I worked with a guy who got zapped with 120 so bad that it caused irreparable nerve damage in his hands. He had the misfortune of standing in a puddle of water which an electrical cord was laying in - it had a small cut in the side.

A guy I was working next to got a jolt of 240 to his temple due to a circuit that was energized with raw wire sticking out of the receptacle. He was kneeling on the floor and turned his head when it grazed him. It completely laid him out. Not sure if he ever went back to work after that.

Both were construction sites. You're lucky, electricity is no joke!

 
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