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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
What is the legal length blade in oklahoma?
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<blockquote data-quote="ez bake" data-source="post: 1982805" data-attributes="member: 229"><p>I've never heard that definition of dagger (and it exists nowhere in any state law or ordinance that I can find). A dagger is commonly defined as a "thrusting tool/weapon" and is pretty much universally viewed as a two-edged (or in some rare cases - no edge at all), blade where it does not have a flat spine, but instead a sharpened edge on both sides of the blade. There are lots of single-edged blades above 3" in length that have nothing to do with what most knife-makers and manufactures call a "dagger". There are also plenty of <3" daggers (or "dagger-edge blades" on various folding knives).</p><p></p><p>That being said, Oklahoma's knife laws are similar to our tattoo laws before just a short time ago - archaic and absolutely senseless.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ez bake, post: 1982805, member: 229"] I've never heard that definition of dagger (and it exists nowhere in any state law or ordinance that I can find). A dagger is commonly defined as a "thrusting tool/weapon" and is pretty much universally viewed as a two-edged (or in some rare cases - no edge at all), blade where it does not have a flat spine, but instead a sharpened edge on both sides of the blade. There are lots of single-edged blades above 3" in length that have nothing to do with what most knife-makers and manufactures call a "dagger". There are also plenty of <3" daggers (or "dagger-edge blades" on various folding knives). That being said, Oklahoma's knife laws are similar to our tattoo laws before just a short time ago - archaic and absolutely senseless. [/QUOTE]
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