Chapter 5) Before there was Leatherman…….

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Aug 23, 2004
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We’ve looked at quite a few different old multi tools that came and went in the decades before the Leatherman Personal Survival Tool was introduced. So what do you think? Was Tim Leatherman’s invention a truly new idea, or was it simply a copy and improvement built upon devices of a previous generation? We may never know for sure, but one thing is certain; Tim Leatherman’s early plans and ideas were a lot more ambitious than the PST design which eventually reached the marketplace in 1983!

According to the “history” page at the Leatherman Tool Group website, Tim was awarded the first of his many patents in the year 1980. That patent was first applied for in 1978, and eventually became United States Patent number 4,238,862. Note that this tool only bears a passing resemblance to the PST which we are all familiar with:

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If you are anything like me, the first thing that comes to mind when seeing the sketch above is something along the lines of, “What in the heck is that contraption?!”

Good question. After considerable study, I think I’ve got it figured out.

Take a look at FIGURE 2 below, which I “cleaned up” a bit. One has no trouble comprehending the assembly near the bottom of the sketch. The fanned-out bouquet of knives, scissors, files, screwdriver blades, etc looks just like every other multi tool on the market. But what are those extra flappy appendages near the top, up by the plier jaws?

editFigure2.jpg


In a nutshell, detail #36 is one of a pair of needlenose jaws, that slip over and are engaged by the #23 regular jaws when needed. When they are NOT needed, these retractable needlenose jaws fold back and out of the way into the #15 handles. Too cool!

What about that #50 thingy hanging off the left side? That, my friends, is a plier-locking mechanism, which turns this early Leatherman into a tool similar to a pair of Vise-Grip pliers. No kidding! It too nests into the handles when not needed. But when you want to lock the jaws (either set of jaws) onto something, you simply swing it over to the right-hand side, engaging the #56 pawl into the #55 serrations along the edge of the handle. The plier jaws are now locked like vise-grips. Shazam!

Here are some more sketches from the patent:

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FIGURE 1 shows the tool all folded up, with an x-ray view of how the jaws would nest together inside the handles.

FIGURE 2 is the same as the one up above, but more cluttered with all the detail numbers.

FIGURES 3 and 4 show the edge of the handles, with the tool in the folded-up position. Note how the handle on the left is thicker than the one on the right. This is because it needs to house the #50 locking-bar device. Also note the “bulge” #65 which is needed to accommodate the #56 pawl we talked about earlier.

FIGURE 6 shows the knife blade locking method. This is quite ironic, given that the original PST never had locking knife blades! Not until the Leatherman Super Tool came along ELEVEN YEARS LATER in 1994 was this blade locking feature offered!

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FIGURES 7 and 8 show x-ray views of how the #36 needlenose jaws are engaged by the #23 regular blunt jaws. Apparently the user would flip the needlenose jaws down onto the blunt jaws while the latter pair were partially open. Then, as the plier was closed, the blunt jaws would engage into hollow recesses within the needlenose jaws. Hmmmm, interesting.

FIGURE 9 shows the needlenose jaws clamped down onto a small piece of material #51. The tool is in Vise-Grip mode, with the #50 locking bar swung over and the #56 pawl engaged in serrations along the handle. (Actually, this FIGURE 9 is kind of crowded and confusing. The locking method is easier to see and understand on the next page, FIGURE 17.)

FIGURE 14 shows the locking bar pawl #56.

FIGURE 12 shows an edge-view of the locking bar pawl #56 engaged in the serrations.

FIGURE 13 simply shows how to put the handles together end-to-end in order to have a 7” ruler.

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FIGURES 15 and 16 are more x-ray views of how the needlenose and blunt nose jaw mechanism works. Evidently there are little pins #45 that keep the two sets of jaws oriented to one another. (They look somewhat fragile to me.)

FIGURE 17 shows the tool in Vise-Grip mode again, this time with the blunt jaws clamped onto a nut. I’m guessing a person is supposed to grip the two plier handles together tightly, achieving some degree of “over-flex” in the handles. Then the locking bar #50 is pressed in until the pawl #56 ratchets up to some place along the serrations #55. When the user then relaxes his grip on the handles, the locking bar and pawl take up the load, keeping the plier jaws clamped onto whatever is between them.

Patent number 4,238,862 then goes rambling on with another five more pages of text. The combination of legal and engineering jargon attempts to explain how the entire mechanism is supposed to work. It is mind-numbing. I cannot force my brain to understand what is trying to be said, and so did not include those pages in this report.

My conclusion? Tim Leatherman certainly had some very ambitious ideas back in 1978! Now 28 years and several million multi tools later, the mega-Leatherman Tool Group still has not employed a couple of his very first ideas. Maybe those retractable needlenose jaws and locking side bar are not practical? Or, you say, maybe they are not even POSSIBLE?

Hmmmm, go back to the “history” page at
http://www.leatherman.com/about-leatherman/history/default.asp

Click on the (1979) or (1980) date icon and look very closely at the pictures. Do you see what I see?

Where can I get one of those tools!

~Bob
 
GLORIOSKY Bob ,

What a great bit of fantastic research . That resembles a bunch of our other tools put together . As you mention from a locking vice grip , dual jaw pliers
( does a flip grip come to mind ) , I wish that there were some of these produced . There probably was but I am sure that there were very few . Congrats chum , I will copy this and file it away . Hats off to you for chasing it down . :thumbup:
 
JOOLIESEWS said:
Hmmmm, go back to the “history” page at
http://www.leatherman.com/about-leatherman/history/default.asp

Click on the (1979) or (1980) date icon and look very closely at the pictures. Do you see what I see?

Where can I get one of those tools!
If Leatherman has a museum, I'll bet that they have those first prototypes on display. They might even have an extra couple, hanging around... ;)

GeoThorn
 
I don't get it.

If this was Leatherman's first patent, why don't any Leatherman tools (past or present) resemble the sketches?
 
cosine said:
Wow! The plans for the first Leatherman tool were certainly ambitious!

AMBITIOUS is certainly the best way to describe these early Leatherman plans. With any new product (toasters, jet airplanes, multi tools, etc.) you would naturally expect early designs to be simpler, then get more sophisticated as the product evolves over the years. Definitely not so here!

In 1978 when this first applied for, I’m seeing five features that could be considered innovative:

a. Fold-up pliers, with folding knives and such in the handles
(even though this concept was seen earlier in the old ABCo fishing pliers, see Chapter 1)

b. Locking knife blades
(were not actually introduced on Leatherman tools until the Super Tool in 1994)

c. Retractable fold-away needlenose jaws
(have never been offered on a multi tool)

d. Parallel-closing needlenose jaws
(a feature that has been seen for decades on parallel pliers like those produced by Bernard, but have never been offered on a multi tool.)

e. Locking-bar mechanism that locks the jaws like vise-grips
(Leatherman eventually came out with the Crunch multi tool with locking jaws, but never utilized the locking method patented above.)

So, of these five “innovative” features, the original Leatherman PST only featured one of them. Why? I can only speculate that it had to do with economics. Perhaps to incorporate all of the innovative features into one single tool would have made that tool prohibitively expensive to purchase?

~Bob
 
cabron50 said:
Below is a link to a Popular Mechanics article that discusses how Tim Leatherman's very ambitious original design ended up hitting the market as the PST.

www.popularmechanics.com/home_improvement/opinion/1276666.html


It would be interesting to know which "trusty camping pocket knife" Mr Leatherman was using. Was it a SAK or some knock off?

His original PST tool was basically a SAK in the form of pliers instead of a pocket knife, and even this type of tool has been shown in these series of post to not to be original to Leatherman. I think Mr Leatherman is given far too much credit for the invention of this type tool. What he did, however, was popularize a plier based tool that has allowed his business to grow into the successful business that it is today. When you think of a plier based tool, you think of a Leaterman. Kudos to him for that.
 
It's not so much that Leatherman "invented" a plier based multitool, but he made a reliable one. Much the way Victorinox and Wenger didn't invent the pocket knife, they just made one of the most reliable versions around.
 
houdini28 said:
It's not so much that Leatherman "invented" a plier based multitool, but he made a reliable one. Much the way Victorinox and Wenger didn't invent the pocket knife, they just made one of the most reliable versions around.

I would not go quite so far as to say that Houdini . The Barnett mentioned in Chapter 1 was widely accepted and widely distributed in its day . Others that Bob has not covered yet proliferated in Europe such as the Seaboard pliers tool made in France , a variation of this tool is available on ebay as I write at ;

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=6598483455&rd=1&sspagename=STRK:MEWA:IT&rd=1

The above one is an electricians multi tool with graduated wire strippers on the top of the blade .

Another that was made was A german one that was made with a number of variations by different makers . One of these can be seen on ebay at ;

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=6598835773&rd=1&sspagename=STRK:MEWA:IT&rd=1


Now I will agree that Mr. Leatherman does make a fine product that others do have to stretch to match the quality of . He has set a high bar and from appearances continues to raise that bar . I will give him credit for not resting on his duff . He has put together a fine marketing team . I have executed searches on the internet searching for odd multi tools utililizing Alta vista foriegn language searches and I believe that I found Leatherman products in Outer Mongolia . But as Bob has brought out here and I assume that he will display others , there were many other reliable ones to come before Leatherman but he has been the most successful . The thing that I fear is that his success kills other innovators of products that now cannot match his marketing effort that he now predominates in.
 
Btt.
Another excellent read! Thanks so much for giving us newbies a new insight into this world of fascinating tools! A definite must-read for all owners & enthusiasts. I'm saving these and filing them for future read-throughs.
 
Thanks for bringing these back to the top. I reread them again and picked up a few things I hadn't picked up the first time through.

Andy
 
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