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The Range
Law & Order
Knife Bill on the President's desk?
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<blockquote data-quote="Kiyot" data-source="post: 867505" data-attributes="member: 627"><p>Ok it says "and that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm", now if I understand this right and the way these spring assisted knives work you do not exert anything on the blade do you? They imply in the writing that the blade is a part of a knife, so to me you can't construe that the word blade is used in place of knife in this instance. So basically my thought if there is a mechanism in place on a knife for it to spring open, and you push a button to open it on the handle, then you exerted on the button, you did not use your hand, wrist or arm on the blade to open it. </p><p></p><p>The way I read it is that you have to push the blade directly to release it, kinda like you do with some cabinet doors that you push in and let go real quick and they pop open.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kiyot, post: 867505, member: 627"] Ok it says "and that requires exertion applied to the blade by hand, wrist, or arm", now if I understand this right and the way these spring assisted knives work you do not exert anything on the blade do you? They imply in the writing that the blade is a part of a knife, so to me you can't construe that the word blade is used in place of knife in this instance. So basically my thought if there is a mechanism in place on a knife for it to spring open, and you push a button to open it on the handle, then you exerted on the button, you did not use your hand, wrist or arm on the blade to open it. The way I read it is that you have to push the blade directly to release it, kinda like you do with some cabinet doors that you push in and let go real quick and they pop open. [/QUOTE]
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