“The More complicated you make the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the works.” This applies not only to design, but to assembly. When the parts of a thing are made in different places and shipped to somewhere else for final assembly, there is no on-site opportunity for direct feedback from assembly to manufacturing to correct screw ups in component production. I rather suspect that this is a lot of the problem here.
(Being more of a blog site, Stuart/Toolguyd doesn’t have the same luxuries or revenue as opposed to larger YouTube channels, all while remaining independent and not beholden to the companies.)
@blaineg@mehcuda67 “Tired of knives that look nice but cut up all your stuff? Well, you’re in luck. We’ve got a knife that looks nice and cuts you instead! No need to worry about your stuff anymore.”
“The More complicated you make the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the works.” This applies not only to design, but to assembly. When the parts of a thing are made in different places and shipped to somewhere else for final assembly, there is no on-site opportunity for direct feedback from assembly to manufacturing to correct screw ups in component production. I rather suspect that this is a lot of the problem here.
Long standing non-regret:
https://toolguyd.com/frustrated-about-tool-brands-marketing/
(Being more of a blog site, Stuart/Toolguyd doesn’t have the same luxuries or revenue as opposed to larger YouTube channels, all while remaining independent and not beholden to the companies.)
Looks like a pretty serious design or implementation flaw.
So @blaineg, how long do you think until meh offers this?
@mehcuda67 Days. Weeks at the outside. Well, no, they’ll first have to age in a warehouse somewhere, so probably a year or two.
Can’t wait to see the spin on “It will cut you first”.
@blaineg @mehcuda67 “Tired of knives that look nice but cut up all your stuff? Well, you’re in luck. We’ve got a knife that looks nice and cuts you instead! No need to worry about your stuff anymore.”