The Underwood Multi-tool (c. 1850)

Decades before the first Swiss Army knife (1891), London’s Underwood of Haymarket crafted this "harped" pocket kit. Designed for Victorian sportsmen, it features a hoof pick, saw, and corkscrew. A rare 19th-century masterpiece of portability.

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I know there are blacksmiths around -- who can tell us just how hard this is to make?

Look how the big drill isn't consistent! I can recommend _One Good Turn_ for the history of threading.

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@Adrenochrome

@clew @Adrenochrome

Hello im a blacksmith. And alsp trained under a verry good farrier for a time
This is not espacialy hard but is time consumeing

It seems like its been made to be impossible to separetly turn each hoofpick?

Makeing the thing

1 create loops by bending thin bar
or upset(widen) ends of a bar and punch a hole in each (more time consumeing)
2 bend the back of the lyre shape
3 pass thin bar through the loops / punched holes
4 make the tools and flatten the ends that you will wrap around the thin bar
5 repeatedly heat the flattened area of each tool and wrap the flattened part around the thin bar

This is easyer to make in a coal/coke forge

Also its possible to get each tool atached prettly stiffly so they dont jangle around but i would probably add something so when they eventualy loosen you can lock them in place in their compact position

To do this id add another thin bar for the tools to rest against,and another on a rivet that slides over the other side to hold them in place

- but i cant figire out how to describe this part well

@festlicheameise @clew @Adrenochrome
I think one could earn a small fortune making and selling these now. Volume wouldn't be enormous, but there are people who would pay a kilobuck or more for one.

@brouhaha @clew @Adrenochrome maybee i will try then

I only have part of a forge setup right now and im busy re-setting up but it would be fun to do a bit of testing

@festlicheameise @clew @Adrenochrome
If I had better 3D CAD skills, I'd try to make a CAD design, print plastic for a fit check, then have a service bureau 3D print it out of metal. It would take some finishing steps to get the cast iron color and texture.