Roxon 3-in-1 Folding Cutlery Travel Set

transmaster

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Sep 11, 2023
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This is my most commonly used EDC tool set rather than the various multi-tools I carry. Every time I use mine, I think of the traditional practice in historical Japan of carrying your personal chopsticks and rice bowl with you. This Roxon 3-n-1 is dead handy; it unfolds into a perfect table set. With carryout, you get plastic knives, forks, and spoons. Having a solid metal set ready to go is game changer. It folds up into a compact set with strong magnetic attachments, with nothing to lose. It does not come apart in a pocket. I carry this Roxon set, plus I carry a set of Japanese-style chopsticks, something I started to do during my time in the USN.

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I ordered 2 more of this set. I am going locate them in my truck, possibles bag, and here at my radio station.
 
This is my most commonly used EDC tool set rather than the various multi-tools I carry. Every time I use mine, I think of the traditional practice in historical Japan of carrying your personal chopsticks and rice bowl with you. This Roxon 3-n-1 is dead handy; it unfolds into a perfect table set. With carryout, you get plastic knives, forks, and spoons. Having a solid metal set ready to go is game changer. It folds up into a compact set with strong magnetic attachments, with nothing to lose. It does not come apart in a pocket. I carry this Roxon set, plus I carry a set of Japanese-style chopsticks, something I started to do during my time in the USN.

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Looks like something I might get some use out of. Do the tools unfold individually without separating them?
 
I don't ever use anything folding for food. What I carry is the Snow Peak Titanium flatware, from Japan. The SCT-001 set, which I think is no longer made, is fork spoon, and knife, but then there's also the SCT-004 spork and SCT-125 foon. They still make the SCT-002 fork and spon set, though. To that, I add a pair of Keith Titanium Ti5633 solid titanium chopsticks, from China (although the chopsticks are closer to Japanese style chopsticks than Chinese style).

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I will admit the Roxon cutlery set are a bit difficult to keep clean away from a source of water to clean them with, but the Hungarian military set are wonderful. Nothing folds they are stored together in the can opener clip. As for metal chopsticks, I have used chopsticks most of my life, I have not yet found a set of metal chopsticks I like the Korean metal chopsticks are terrible. I have not tried titanium ones however.
 
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