I know it's not as exciting as the vast majority of knives appearing in this subforum, but for me, this is a bit of a welcome reunion:
Around 20 or so years ago, on Christmas morning, I received an original pattern Leatherman Wave from my parents. At the time I was an aspiring stagehand learning my craft, and quickly grew fond of this tool and its selection of tools, especially the smallest flathead driver which I found fit perfectly on the retaining screw of a common style of XLR audio connector. I carried this tool everywhere, through the end of high school and on into college. Sadly, after a long and frustrating load in for an event, I realized all too late that I had left my beloved tool behind on the scaffold on which I was working, amongst other production gear. I went back first thing the next day hoping to find it waiting for me, but it was gone, most definitely pilfered by a coworker.
Following my loss, I tried to find a suitable replacement. This has amounted to two Leatherman Surges, two of the newer pattern Waves, a Skeletool, a Freestyle, a couple Gerber tools, and a SOG sailing mutlitool. None of them ever held up as well as my old Wave did. Somewhere in a bin there's a bunch of broken tools, some with blades snapped off, a Surge with half its plier jaws snapped off, and a Wave and Skeletool in two halves entirely, all missing their removable bits and such. Not sure what happened to Leatherman's quality over the years, but they're certainly not what they used to be.
All that said, today, on Facebook Marketplace of all places, I finally found a replacement for my beloved multitool, an original pattern Leatherman Wave, complete with matching Brown leather pouch, just like the one my parents gave me years ago. The tool is in excellent shape, I suspect not used much, as the blades just have their original edges, and none of the tools appear to have been used, or at least not that much. She does sport a bit of rust though, mainly on the plier jaws, but a few spots throughout. Any thoughts on how to clean it off without hurting the tool would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Sent from my SM-G998U using Tapatalk
Around 20 or so years ago, on Christmas morning, I received an original pattern Leatherman Wave from my parents. At the time I was an aspiring stagehand learning my craft, and quickly grew fond of this tool and its selection of tools, especially the smallest flathead driver which I found fit perfectly on the retaining screw of a common style of XLR audio connector. I carried this tool everywhere, through the end of high school and on into college. Sadly, after a long and frustrating load in for an event, I realized all too late that I had left my beloved tool behind on the scaffold on which I was working, amongst other production gear. I went back first thing the next day hoping to find it waiting for me, but it was gone, most definitely pilfered by a coworker.
Following my loss, I tried to find a suitable replacement. This has amounted to two Leatherman Surges, two of the newer pattern Waves, a Skeletool, a Freestyle, a couple Gerber tools, and a SOG sailing mutlitool. None of them ever held up as well as my old Wave did. Somewhere in a bin there's a bunch of broken tools, some with blades snapped off, a Surge with half its plier jaws snapped off, and a Wave and Skeletool in two halves entirely, all missing their removable bits and such. Not sure what happened to Leatherman's quality over the years, but they're certainly not what they used to be.
All that said, today, on Facebook Marketplace of all places, I finally found a replacement for my beloved multitool, an original pattern Leatherman Wave, complete with matching Brown leather pouch, just like the one my parents gave me years ago. The tool is in excellent shape, I suspect not used much, as the blades just have their original edges, and none of the tools appear to have been used, or at least not that much. She does sport a bit of rust though, mainly on the plier jaws, but a few spots throughout. Any thoughts on how to clean it off without hurting the tool would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!

Sent from my SM-G998U using Tapatalk