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  • printcraft

    INGO Clown
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    16   0   0
    Feb 14, 2008
    39,045
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    Uranus
    Did you guys know that after sharpening a lawnmower blade they are at least twice as sharp as when you started?

    The bleeding has stopped and I don't need stitches! :rockwoot:
     

    hoosierdaddy1976

    I Can't Believe it's not Shooter
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    16   0   0
    Mar 17, 2011
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    newton county
    Years ago I turned the tip of my thumb into a flip-top with a chef knife cutting a semi-frozen cheesecake. Needed six or seven stitches to batten it back down, and getting to see the doc inject the lidocaine into the wound was cool, even if the first jab hurt. My kershaw launch 6 almost tasted blood this afternoon. Cut open a bag of mulch, and when I went to close it against my leg, I almost misjudged the angle. Slight poke, but no broken skin.
     

    BehindBlueI's

    Grandmaster
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    29   0   0
    Oct 3, 2012
    25,897
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    Years ago I turned the tip of my thumb into a flip-top with a chef knife cutting a semi-frozen cheesecake. Needed six or seven stitches to batten it back down, and getting to see the doc inject the lidocaine into the wound was cool, even if the first jab hurt. My kershaw launch 6 almost tasted blood this afternoon. Cut open a bag of mulch, and when I went to close it against my leg, I almost misjudged the angle. Slight poke, but no broken skin.

    Was the cheesecake ok?
     

    rkwhyte2

    aka: Vinny
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    37   0   0
    Sep 26, 2012
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    Sheridan
    I would assume it depends on the sharpness of the of the serrations and the design as well.
    Some serrated blades are so sharp that they actually cut like a straight edge.
    Some are more like a saw blade with sharp teeth and will rip material apart rather than cutting it.

    Something like that will probably leave a mark:

    FOPJSK6.jpg

    Those aren't serrations those are teeth. Really wicked sharp teeth.
     
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