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  2. LAWKS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LAWKS

    The Lake and Walker Knife Safety system (LAWKS) is a patented [1] addition to folding knives using the Walker Linerlock, designed by noted Knifemakers' Guild members Ron Lake and Michael Walker. The safety comes in two versions: original LAWKS and the Columbia River Knife & Tool company's patented AutoLAWKS.

  3. Polespear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polespear

    The pole is usually between four feet and ten feet long and made of fiberglass, carbon fibre, aluminum, graphite, or wood. Longer versions often break down into two or more pieces that screw together. The tip is either threaded to accept different kinds of spear tips or already has a fixed tip attached.

  4. Man catcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_catcher

    Modern sasumata man catcher used by riot police in Japan. While other man catchers are no longer in use, the sasumata (described above) currently has modern variants that are semi-flexible, with padding, blunt endpoints, and other slightly modified geometry, designed to significantly reduce the chance of injury to restrained civilians.

  5. Marble Arms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marble_Arms

    Products expanded to include outdoor goods like a novel safety axe, hunting knives, match safes, compasses and the Marble Game Getter combination gun. The company grew to be a foremost manufacturer of gun sights, competing with rivals such as Lyman , Redfield , Pacific , King , and Williams gun sight companies.

  6. Fishing gaff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_gaff

    A standard-sized gaff used in angling Fishing with a long pole gaff. In fishing, a gaff is a handheld pole with a sharp hook or sideway spike on the distal end, which is used to swing and stab into the body of a large fish like a pickaxe (ideally, the tip of the hook/spike is placed under the fish's backbone) and then pull the fish out of the water like using a pike pole.

  7. Fishing rod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_rod

    The lure weight of a fishing rod describes the optimal weight range of terminal tackle (mainly the bait and hook/lure, and any attached float, sinker, swivel and/or heavy leader), usually expressed in ounces or grams, that the rod is designed to handle in order to achieve good casting outcome. Casting lures heavier than the designated weights ...