It has a lot of good features for alpine hiking and camping where you don’t want to bring a ton of pack weight because you are going up and down a lot of elevation etc. I’ve used the hammers and pliers quite a bit. I like the caribiner style clip to secure it easily
Why do you think any multi tool is ever marketed as a "primary" tool????? The signal is the perfect outdoors man tool. Every outdoorsman will always have their primary tools but when camp is set up and you go fishing, ur not taking all ur primary tools with u all the time. Most outdoorsman are always in all types of situations where ur never always gonna have primary tools but when a situation arises they are always prepared with minimal effort
I agree with the original poster. The multi tool is my primary and only tool I take when I'm hiking and back packing in the back country. I do not carry a saw or an axe they are way too heavy to carry. Every ounce adds up when you gotta carry it on your back. I've been thinking about the Leatherman signal but I don't know if I need it enough over carrying my 3 ounce swiss army knife
This is the way. I do not understand how this is such a hard concept for people to understand. One should be proficient at lighting a fire with fatwood and a ferro rod, for instance. The ferro rod on the Signal is not meant to be a "primary" by any means. But if you ever needed the thing you'd trade your house for it in that moment. The ferro rod being integrated into the Signal is why it is the clear winner for me.
A lot of folks are mentioning that they bought it because of the hammer. I did the same but I realized that a rock or branch in the wilderness do a much better job of hammering.
@@Andyscollection69 They are. But, it's still an option in a survival situation. A last minute and pray for the best option. Better than nothing. It's been a great tool so far. Almost a year of ownership now. A bit heavy. Use the hammer most often.
@bettersteps how are they a gimmick. The word "gimmick" around this tool has become quite parot like. The whistle is excellent and the sound carries further than yelling at about 1/10th the effort. The ferro rod, to an actual outdoorsman who can light a fire comfortably in this manner, could possibly be the most important aspect of this tool. I know it is to me. So a gimmick? I don't feel that way at all.
agreed, but I'd also say that a bunch of knife makers make shit serrated blades, the deep serrated blades found on something like the Wingman or P2 are horrendous. The nice shallow ones like on a Victorinox Skipper are amazing.
I use my Signal as urban EDC only, it comes very handy at work or while doing my chores around town or at home. Love the whistle!!... I can call my kids without yelling😃 I have several other Leatherman multi-tools, one for each occasion, fishing, camping, hiking, etc, that way I don't need to depend just on my Signal.
@@maxlvledc For camping I use the Surge but also bring the Signal because of the whistle and the ferro rod. For hiking the Charge or the Wave and the Skeletool for BBQ picnic 🙂 The Wingman is my favorite for fishing, best scissors to cut fishing line and the tool is not that expensive in case I drop it in the lake.
If you’ve ever just about ripped a chunk of your palm off by pinching it between the spines of the saw/file and either blade on the wave+, the signal is an immense upgrade. Specifically when cutting double stranded wire, like barbed wire
They should've given the signal to each cast member to those on the show survivor that would've both great marketing for them as well as show just how useful the signal is..
I like the emergency & rescue & survival features of the L. Signal. It would be perfect for long travel if could be easily changed into a TSA compliant multitool (removable blades like the standard exchangable saw blade).
1:30 in, and you're very mistaken. Nowhere in their marketing do they say this replaces any given tool. It's very obviously a backup for when you *don't happen to have a saw, or ferro rod, or full size knife* . It's the exact same concept as any other multi-tool, only it has outdoor focused options. If I lost my pack, or I forgot a tool, or someone lost one, or one breaks, this is a backup. If I find myself stranded with only what's attached to me, this would be a hell of a help.
Great sum up! I ordered mine just yesterday, i feel it is meant to serve you when you dont expect to need it. I dont think it is meant to replace your gear when you go camping….
For me the hammer is a must have. Personally, having 2 Leatherman. Signal for simple camping, hiking, easy outdoor trips. And MUT for heavy duty, military applications, range, hunting, missions etc.
For me, I think I'll stick with my Surge for camping. It covers all my needs, and with that T-shank bit, I can really stretch it out into anything I might come across. The signal looked interesting, but at the end of the day, I can just stick a fire starter in the Surge's pouch, and keep a whistle around my neck. And those are the only two things it really seemed to add for me.
Good video. But I feel that a lot of people testing out those multi-tool don't really get the point of caring one all the time what ever the circumstances are. I have a MUT that I love, I use it nearly everyday for a lot of small task. Sure I have a dedicated tool that could do the task better but my Leatherman is in my pocket and is enough for it so why bother go to the garage, and look for a tool when during all that time you'd be fine with the multitool. Also it's the best tool for a lot of outdoor job where you need to cut some stuff, use the pliers, the screwdriver. Again you can find dedicated tool for all that but when you're on the rush you don't usually carry the whole tool box. About A month ago I decided to get a new Leatherman for outdoor stuff because I don't want to loose my MUT. After some research I decide to go for the Signal (in blue and red do find it easily anywhere) and I love if, more compact then the MUT and with more day to day tool like a can opener and a regular plier. Also the Swedish lighter is not a gimmick ! Of course you will carry a lighter or matchbox with you (even more as I'm a smoker) but sometime you loose stuff or it can get wet ! When camping you usually take a saw/machete/axe, some big knife to. But sometime you just want to travel ultra light and the Signal seems perfect to replace all that heavy stuff. The saw can help you weaken branches that you brake with you foot or hand after, the blade can cut anything and be use to cook and eat ... As for the everyday use, if you're doing a lot of crafting, small woodwork of home fixing, it's still the most useful tool you'll have. Anyway sorry for the long post but I need to appease my mind after all people talks about is how it perform in the wild and how you can find better specific tool for those task. A simple comparison, Multitools are like a BMW M3 (or a Audi S4 if you prefer), Sure you can find a better racecar that will dominate on the track, or a better family car, but the M3 can be a great track car AND a family car. Anyway, thanks for the video defending the Signal (a lot of people don't like it) PEACE
If you live in a rural area and are prone to spontaneous outdoor activities then it’s a perfect tool. I could wear it and use it at work and then head out fishing. Remove a hook from a fish and fillet it. Start a fire and cook it up. The bottle opener/belt loop clip is also a huge component to ease of access. And then on top of that I have a hammer as well. It’s a win in my book I’ve finally found my almost perfect multi tool
Two is one , one is none that’s the way I look at that tool example if you carry a fire starter and you loose it then at least you have the one on the leathermen so yes it’s a back up to your main tools. Do you have a video on the file replacement you did on the leathermen? Great idea!
My normal EDC multi is a Charge Ti. I would have not given the Signal a second look if not for TSA. If you want to travel and not arouse suspicion at the gate you don't/can't carry everything you would have in a bug out bag. Being stripped of options I advance shipped a brand new Signal to my destination knowing the return trip would be a cross-country drive, without my usual kit. The signal fills that niche without buying duplicates of everything in my bag at home. After that purpose it serves as a nifty back up for short day hikes and birding excursions. It has a place as another option in a pinch.
I believe this tool is marketed badly. Leatherman branded it recreational outdoorsy. To me it is the ultimate urban survival tool. It has utilities for both environments, which makes it by definition all-round. It could definitely use another blade, even a little one would contribute a lot imo. You know, when sh£t goes down, you're lucky if you're at home with all of your stuff. This is essential edc for me. Makes a lot of sense in this day and age.
Do you hike or just go camping with a truck full of stuff? You seem to think that everybody has everything all the time and therefore the tools on this device are useless because of course you will have an axe when you just hiked 6 hours into the mountains.....
While I don't disagree with you about this one, I prefer my Rebar because it has one of everything I need and almost nothing I don't. But I do wish it had the whistle and fire steel. The Signal is an excellent EDC but I don't have one, and probably will be getting the Skeletool instead, for when the Rebar is too much. I also like my Swiss Army Knifes (Huntsman, One Handed Trekker, Rangergrip78), but I also have a van full of big tools for when sh*t gets real. But I especially like your point about the ability to service other tools. Priceless!
I bought a Charge Plus and a Signal. I planned on keeping the Signal with my hiking daypack. However, I ended up returning the Signal. I simply loved the Charge Plus too much. The Signal did not feel as nice in my hand. I have a separate whistle and ferro rod. The other reason for returning the Signal was that I was not prepared for how small it actually was. I decided that I wanted to keep the serrated blade and the knife blade separate for sharpening purposes. It appears the Signal is a dressed down version of the MUT. I am sure those are good tools for their intended use.
I have to agree with a lot of these arguments, and for a similar reasoning I feel like more multi-tools should come in a bladeless variety. I always carry a Leatherman tool, a dedicated pocket knife, and a flashlight. The knife on my Leatherman is small, hard to open, and cumbersome to use compared to the dedicated knife I'm carrying. But having pliers, bottle/can opener, scissors, etc. with me at all times is great. I just wish I could choose a multitool that wasn't going to be redundant in some aspects - that Signal would be really great with a saw and file for instance, instead of having the blade - or if it were fully serrated, it would at least distinguish itself. Not to mention that, depending on where you live/work, the blade can be problematic in a way that scissors, saws, files, and such are not.
Mine lives in my lunchbox for work. I agree, most uses are half-way measures. The knife is sharp and multi function, but not good enough for many things. The saw could be useful, but I have never used it. The sharpener is too small to really be effective. If you have to use the ferrostick, you have ventured too far off of the path. Pliers are decent and provide decent grip, the cutters are great. The flat bit driver is good, the bottle opener is good, the hammer is better than nothing, the 1/4 inch driver is good for both Leatherman and regular 1/4 inch bits.
I agree with what you are saying, but if we apply your main argument as a litmus test, then the whole category of multi-tool is invalid, not just the signal: one should always be prepared, there are always better version of the tool, you shouldn't depend your mission-critical tasks on a "lite" or "crippled" version of the tool. I don't think that's why people carry a multi-tool. People do use a primary full version of the tool for their mission critical tasks. They use multi-tools for foreseeable tasks that they have performed on a regular basis and gauged that the multi-tool will be "good enough", trading off functionality for convenience, and unforeseeable tasks that they have no way of gauging what full size tools to bring.
Hi, I don't know if you still read these comments or not but what other tools that leatherman makes are compatible with the signal knife insert. I live in a country where it is suspicious having a knife that is just barely knife-legal so I would very much love to replace it with some useful tool that it lacks. And in what ways can I get my hands on the others inserts? Is there some way where I could buy them as "replacement" parts for another tool they offer?
A persuasive analysis. It sounds like a disconnect exists within Leatherman - the people marketing the Signal have not talked to the engineers who designed it, so they misunderstand the use case that it was designed for.
I miss my Signal. I carried it as a backup to my backup gear. My Super Tool 300 was always the multitool on my hip in the woods. Now I EDC a Charge + and a Skeletool but the Super Tool 300 is always in my backpack which goes with me if I leave camp as a backup to the Charge. The Signal is an absolute last ditch along with the survival tin
Whistle equals signal fire, smoke and light. So serves same purpose as whistle. So maybe your kayaking and you lose your kayak and gear, but you still have this tool in your pocket....Then every item can become a life saver.
Hey that's awesome putting the exchanging tool on the signal. I'm going to do the same, and was wondering if it just dropped right in or if you had to modify the lock mechanism at all and if so how? I can probably figure it out but hoping you could give me a headstart on it.
Putting in the signal exchanger is a major modification.I think I better solution is to use a Leatherman charge handle so that you can get both the file and the saw on the signal at the same time. This is called a Sarge mod
Hi , i have some questions. So i try to add surge saw exchanger on my signal but i wont fit on there at all . And its apparently this saw exchanger is come from the old surge i am not sure. Its pretty much looks different than your's it has a flat surface. So i wonder if ot this mods only works with the new sure saw exchanger or u do a little grinding on some part to fit in on ur signal ?? Looking forward Cheers 👍👍
I haven't much since finding the issues. I can definitely fix it, I just need to get some time to work on it. I have a new one coming I will test asap. Cheers.
I'm building a get home/bug out bag. Still going back and forth on a Signal or a Skeletool. The difference in price doesn't seem to justify the Signal, but on the other hand, to have this kind of redundancy in one well made tool is hard to find.
1:46 are you high? It’s a backup tool. When you don’t have the primary. It has 14 tools on my belt. It’s not rocket science. I think you’re expectations are wayyyyyyyyy to high for a multi tool.
What you're forgetting though is that it's not meant to be the main tool. You carry your main tools. You keep this in your pocket, clipped to your pants, etc. What if your kayak tips over and you lose your gear? What happens if you're crossing a bridge/ledge/etc and your gear falls, What if you fall down a bit of cliff or something and lose access to your gear? The idea is that it can assist you in situations where you have no other gear. It isn't meant to REPLACE that other gear, but rather to be a backup in the event that you find yourself, for one reason or another, without that other gear. That being said, I enjoy your video.
It has a lot of good features for alpine hiking and camping where you don’t want to bring a ton of pack weight because you are going up and down a lot of elevation etc. I’ve used the hammers and pliers quite a bit. I like the caribiner style clip to secure it easily
Why do you think any multi tool is ever marketed as a "primary" tool????? The signal is the perfect outdoors man tool. Every outdoorsman will always have their primary tools but when camp is set up and you go fishing, ur not taking all ur primary tools with u all the time. Most outdoorsman are always in all types of situations where ur never always gonna have primary tools but when a situation arises they are always prepared with minimal effort
I would definitely not call the Signal a perfect outdoorsman tool, not by a long shot. The closest I can come up with is the ST300 for that title.
I agree with the original poster. The multi tool is my primary and only tool I take when I'm hiking and back packing in the back country. I do not carry a saw or an axe they are way too heavy to carry. Every ounce adds up when you gotta carry it on your back. I've been thinking about the Leatherman signal but I don't know if I need it enough over carrying my 3 ounce swiss army knife
This is the way. I do not understand how this is such a hard concept for people to understand.
One should be proficient at lighting a fire with fatwood and a ferro rod, for instance. The ferro rod on the Signal is not meant to be a "primary" by any means. But if you ever needed the thing you'd trade your house for it in that moment.
The ferro rod being integrated into the Signal is why it is the clear winner for me.
A lot of folks are mentioning that they bought it because of the hammer. I did the same but I realized that a rock or branch in the wilderness do a much better job of hammering.
Agree 👌💪👊🏻
The hammer is the main reason I've been attracted to this Leather-man tool.
You ain’t the only one I just feel the fire rod and whistle feels like a gimmick
@@Andyscollection69 They are. But, it's still an option in a survival situation. A last minute and pray for the best option. Better than nothing. It's been a great tool so far. Almost a year of ownership now. A bit heavy. Use the hammer most often.
@bettersteps how are they a gimmick. The word "gimmick" around this tool has become quite parot like.
The whistle is excellent and the sound carries further than yelling at about 1/10th the effort.
The ferro rod, to an actual outdoorsman who can light a fire comfortably in this manner, could possibly be the most important aspect of this tool. I know it is to me. So a gimmick? I don't feel that way at all.
People who put down serrated blades have never worked on a ship or near rope in general, its fundamental.
agreed, but I'd also say that a bunch of knife makers make shit serrated blades, the deep serrated blades found on something like the Wingman or P2 are horrendous. The nice shallow ones like on a Victorinox Skipper are amazing.
I use my Signal as urban EDC only, it comes very handy at work or while doing my chores around town or at home. Love the whistle!!... I can call my kids without yelling😃 I have several other Leatherman multi-tools, one for each occasion, fishing, camping, hiking, etc, that way I don't need to depend just on my Signal.
Question which ones do you use for those other moments?
@@maxlvledc For camping I use the Surge but also bring the Signal because of the whistle and the ferro rod. For hiking the Charge or the Wave and the Skeletool for BBQ picnic 🙂 The Wingman is my favorite for fishing, best scissors to cut fishing line and the tool is not that expensive in case I drop it in the lake.
If you’ve ever just about ripped a chunk of your palm off by pinching it between the spines of the saw/file and either blade on the wave+, the signal is an immense upgrade. Specifically when cutting double stranded wire, like barbed wire
I carry it for leisure mountain biking, where it’s impractical to carry each separate representative tool
Exactly 👌👌👌
They should've given the signal to each cast member to those on the show survivor that would've both great marketing for them as well as show just how useful the signal is..
Hopefully Leatherman will come out with another with outdoors stuff like a micro lite, fire steel etc..
I like the emergency & rescue & survival features of the L. Signal. It would be perfect for long travel if could be easily changed into a TSA compliant multitool (removable blades like the standard exchangable saw blade).
Bought it knowing it was a gimmick for outdoor use, because of the specific reasons you stated. Mine lives in my work bag for those unique features.
1:30 in, and you're very mistaken. Nowhere in their marketing do they say this replaces any given tool. It's very obviously a backup for when you *don't happen to have a saw, or ferro rod, or full size knife* . It's the exact same concept as any other multi-tool, only it has outdoor focused options. If I lost my pack, or I forgot a tool, or someone lost one, or one breaks, this is a backup. If I find myself stranded with only what's attached to me, this would be a hell of a help.
Great sum up! I ordered mine just yesterday, i feel it is meant to serve you when you dont expect to need it. I dont think it is meant to replace your gear when you go camping….
Correct, imo st300 is the best in the woods
For me the hammer is a must have.
Personally, having 2 Leatherman. Signal for simple camping, hiking, easy outdoor trips. And MUT for heavy duty, military applications, range, hunting, missions etc.
For me, I think I'll stick with my Surge for camping.
It covers all my needs, and with that T-shank bit, I can really stretch it out into anything I might come across.
The signal looked interesting, but at the end of the day, I can just stick a fire starter in the Surge's pouch, and keep a whistle around my neck. And those are the only two things it really seemed to add for me.
Good video. But I feel that a lot of people testing out those multi-tool don't really get the point of caring one all the time what ever the circumstances are. I have a MUT that I love, I use it nearly everyday for a lot of small task. Sure I have a dedicated tool that could do the task better but my Leatherman is in my pocket and is enough for it so why bother go to the garage, and look for a tool when during all that time you'd be fine with the multitool.
Also it's the best tool for a lot of outdoor job where you need to cut some stuff, use the pliers, the screwdriver. Again you can find dedicated tool for all that but when you're on the rush you don't usually carry the whole tool box.
About A month ago I decided to get a new Leatherman for outdoor stuff because I don't want to loose my MUT. After some research I decide to go for the Signal (in blue and red do find it easily anywhere) and I love if, more compact then the MUT and with more day to day tool like a can opener and a regular plier. Also the Swedish lighter is not a gimmick ! Of course you will carry a lighter or matchbox with you (even more as I'm a smoker) but sometime you loose stuff or it can get wet !
When camping you usually take a saw/machete/axe, some big knife to. But sometime you just want to travel ultra light and the Signal seems perfect to replace all that heavy stuff. The saw can help you weaken branches that you brake with you foot or hand after, the blade can cut anything and be use to cook and eat ...
As for the everyday use, if you're doing a lot of crafting, small woodwork of home fixing, it's still the most useful tool you'll have.
Anyway sorry for the long post but I need to appease my mind after all people talks about is how it perform in the wild and how you can find better specific tool for those task.
A simple comparison, Multitools are like a BMW M3 (or a Audi S4 if you prefer), Sure you can find a better racecar that will dominate on the track, or a better family car, but the M3 can be a great track car AND a family car.
Anyway, thanks for the video defending the Signal (a lot of people don't like it)
PEACE
Thanks for this! Really interesting
@@maxlvledc you're welcome. your take on the Signal was refreshing after seeing a lot of negative review.
If you live in a rural area and are prone to spontaneous outdoor activities then it’s a perfect tool. I could wear it and use it at work and then head out fishing. Remove a hook from a fish and fillet it. Start a fire and cook it up. The bottle opener/belt loop clip is also a huge component to ease of access. And then on top of that I have a hammer as well. It’s a win in my book I’ve finally found my almost perfect multi tool
Two is one , one is none that’s the way I look at that tool example if you carry a fire starter and you loose it then at least you have the one on the leathermen so yes it’s a back up to your main tools. Do you have a video on the file replacement you did on the leathermen? Great idea!
been a while since I looked at this video, if its the Surge exchanger, its very involved and not really recommended.
Fair review. Love the Signal and Raptor combo for almost any situation.
My normal EDC multi is a Charge Ti. I would have not given the Signal a second look if not for TSA. If you want to travel and not arouse suspicion at the gate you don't/can't carry everything you would have in a bug out bag. Being stripped of options I advance shipped a brand new Signal to my destination knowing the return trip would be a cross-country drive, without my usual kit. The signal fills that niche without buying duplicates of everything in my bag at home. After that purpose it serves as a nifty back up for short day hikes and birding excursions. It has a place as another option in a pinch.
Thank you now I'm thinking about one for a get home bag
It's a solid choice but honestly I'd suggest an st300 as a get home tool. Id trust my life to an st300, but the signal is a great every day tool
I believe this tool is marketed badly. Leatherman branded it recreational outdoorsy. To me it is the ultimate urban survival tool. It has utilities for both environments, which makes it by definition all-round. It could definitely use another blade, even a little one would contribute a lot imo. You know, when sh£t goes down, you're lucky if you're at home with all of your stuff. This is essential edc for me. Makes a lot of sense in this day and age.
Do you hike or just go camping with a truck full of stuff? You seem to think that everybody has everything all the time and therefore the tools on this device are useless because of course you will have an axe when you just hiked 6 hours into the mountains.....
I just think that for camping etc. Is victorinox huntsman more useful
I gotta say it’s been awhile since I needed to cut my way through a wall with my leatherman
Well..thats a good thing I would guess lol
I’ve been looking at the signal for a couple months, but after seeing your leap review I’m conflicted hahaha
Thanks for the upload!
Hehe, I carry leap at work (no knives allowed) and signal when I want to go minimal.
Maxlvledc I think it’s nice to be able to remove the knife, I always carry a folder so it would be nice to be able to carry a multi tool without one
Yep, that's kind of my thing too
While I don't disagree with you about this one, I prefer my Rebar because it has one of everything I need and almost nothing I don't. But I do wish it had the whistle and fire steel.
The Signal is an excellent EDC but I don't have one, and probably will be getting the Skeletool instead, for when the Rebar is too much. I also like my Swiss Army Knifes (Huntsman, One Handed Trekker, Rangergrip78), but I also have a van full of big tools for when sh*t gets real.
But I especially like your point about the ability to service other tools. Priceless!
I bought a Charge Plus and a Signal. I planned on keeping the Signal with my hiking daypack. However, I ended up returning the Signal. I simply loved the Charge Plus too much. The Signal did not feel as nice in my hand. I have a separate whistle and ferro rod. The other reason for returning the Signal was that I was not prepared for how small it actually was. I decided that I wanted to keep the serrated blade and the knife blade separate for sharpening purposes. It appears the Signal is a dressed down version of the MUT. I am sure those are good tools for their intended use.
I have to agree with a lot of these arguments, and for a similar reasoning I feel like more multi-tools should come in a bladeless variety. I always carry a Leatherman tool, a dedicated pocket knife, and a flashlight. The knife on my Leatherman is small, hard to open, and cumbersome to use compared to the dedicated knife I'm carrying. But having pliers, bottle/can opener, scissors, etc. with me at all times is great. I just wish I could choose a multitool that wasn't going to be redundant in some aspects - that Signal would be really great with a saw and file for instance, instead of having the blade - or if it were fully serrated, it would at least distinguish itself. Not to mention that, depending on where you live/work, the blade can be problematic in a way that scissors, saws, files, and such are not.
Mine lives in my lunchbox for work. I agree, most uses are half-way measures.
The knife is sharp and multi function, but not good enough for many things.
The saw could be useful, but I have never used it.
The sharpener is too small to really be effective.
If you have to use the ferrostick, you have ventured too far off of the path.
Pliers are decent and provide decent grip, the cutters are great.
The flat bit driver is good, the bottle opener is good, the hammer is better than nothing, the 1/4 inch driver is good for both Leatherman and regular 1/4 inch bits.
Cant agree more. That sharpener is useless and I agree the whistle is the most underrated piece of equipment!
All Leatherman’s or multi tools are secondary tools.
Secondary to a fixed blade for sure, Secondary to any primary tool. But there are many folders where I'd still take the Leatherman over it.
At last a sensible comment / that’s why these tools are built 👌👊🏻👊🏻👊🏻
I agree with what you are saying, but if we apply your main argument as a litmus test, then the whole category of multi-tool is invalid, not just the signal: one should always be prepared, there are always better version of the tool, you shouldn't depend your mission-critical tasks on a "lite" or "crippled" version of the tool. I don't think that's why people carry a multi-tool. People do use a primary full version of the tool for their mission critical tasks. They use multi-tools for foreseeable tasks that they have performed on a regular basis and gauged that the multi-tool will be "good enough", trading off functionality for convenience, and unforeseeable tasks that they have no way of gauging what full size tools to bring.
well said.
Hi, I don't know if you still read these comments or not but what other tools that leatherman makes are compatible with the signal knife insert. I live in a country where it is suspicious having a knife that is just barely knife-legal so I would very much love to replace it with some useful tool that it lacks. And in what ways can I get my hands on the others inserts? Is there some way where I could buy them as "replacement" parts for another tool they offer?
A persuasive analysis. It sounds like a disconnect exists within Leatherman - the people marketing the Signal have not talked to the engineers who designed it, so they misunderstand the use case that it was designed for.
I miss my Signal. I carried it as a backup to my backup gear. My Super Tool 300 was always the multitool on my hip in the woods. Now I EDC a Charge + and a Skeletool but the Super Tool 300 is always in my backpack which goes with me if I leave camp as a backup to the Charge. The Signal is an absolute last ditch along with the survival tin
I like the signal in places you never expect to need it. But st300 is a much better outdoor tool in general
Whistle equals signal fire, smoke and light. So serves same purpose as whistle. So maybe your kayaking and you lose your kayak and gear, but you still have this tool in your pocket....Then every item can become a life saver.
Agreed, but I would be sheath carrying with all those tools locked in personally..but then again..I'm wierd lol
I think it's no coincidence they named it after the signaling part.
Hey that's awesome putting the exchanging tool on the signal. I'm going to do the same, and was wondering if it just dropped right in or if you had to modify the lock mechanism at all and if so how? I can probably figure it out but hoping you could give me a headstart on it.
Putting in the signal exchanger is a major modification.I think I better solution is to use a Leatherman charge handle so that you can get both the file and the saw on the signal at the same time. This is called a Sarge mod
I want to put surge exchanger to signal, too. Can I just unscrew the exchanger and put it on my signal ? Is there any change I need to do?
No, it's an incredibly complicated process. Not recommended
Great tool for someone else.
I returned mine for a Surge.
Right on!
Honestly I bought it because it was 60 bucks on offer up and that wasn't much more than it would cost to buy the stammer
@@kenaaronbabbit9987 👍
The whistle is fine, but I can make louder noises with my fingers in six different ways.
Does anybody know if the awl from the signal will for in replacement of the scissors on the wave?
Can you post how you modified it to be able to use the changing blades
Well, I sold that tool, and don't plan on doing that mod again any time soon. Let's just say it's incredibly involved, I would not recommend it
@@maxlvledc did you have to modify the Signal to get the t Shank exchanger into it or just modify the Adapter?
@@Matt-ps9iz this was a very major mod job, had to grind the frame and everything
Hi , i have some questions. So i try to add surge saw exchanger on my signal but i wont fit on there at all . And its apparently this saw exchanger is come from the old surge i am not sure. Its pretty much looks different than your's it has a flat surface. So i wonder if ot this mods only works with the new sure saw exchanger or u do a little grinding on some part to fit in on ur signal ??
Looking forward
Cheers 👍👍
yep I had to grind down a lot of the metal to make it fit.
Do you still carry it with the lock issues?
I haven't much since finding the issues. I can definitely fix it, I just need to get some time to work on it. I have a new one coming I will test asap. Cheers.
where is the second part
I think I scrapped the idea.. too opinion driven
Hi, what's the last tool on the bottom right?
Looks like a modded hybrid
Pretty good review in comparison to other ones
Thanks! I did a better one on the signal recently. This was a while qgo
I'm building a get home/bug out bag. Still going back and forth on a Signal or a Skeletool. The difference in price doesn't seem to justify the Signal, but on the other hand, to have this kind of redundancy in one well made tool is hard to find.
If your life depends on it...don't buy either...get the Surge...atm it's the perfect build around multitool
@@maxlvledc Thanks ! I will check it out for sure. Choosing the right multi-tool has become the hardest decision in my build.
1:46 are you high? It’s a backup tool. When you don’t have the primary. It has 14 tools on my belt. It’s not rocket science. I think you’re expectations are wayyyyyyyyy to high for a multi tool.
I agree!
What you're forgetting though is that it's not meant to be the main tool. You carry your main tools. You keep this in your pocket, clipped to your pants, etc. What if your kayak tips over and you lose your gear? What happens if you're crossing a bridge/ledge/etc and your gear falls, What if you fall down a bit of cliff or something and lose access to your gear? The idea is that it can assist you in situations where you have no other gear. It isn't meant to REPLACE that other gear, but rather to be a backup in the event that you find yourself, for one reason or another, without that other gear.
That being said, I enjoy your video.
I agree, but I'd rather have a St300 with a ferro rod attached to the sheath..in the woods I'd never depend on a pocket clip.
@@maxlvledc Very true. You aren't wrong there.
Fair review. I love mine!
Multiforce ozark best hands down capp
It has a lot of positives, but not best overall. Excellent for the cost though, no question
@@maxlvledc havent bought it yet, prolly gonna buy the leatherman wave plus
If you want to support Walmart and capitalize on leathermans expired patent go ahead.
+
Cheers Mate!