I used the bottle opener from an Viktorinox knife in exactly the same manner you showed here. Worked like a charm... and I didn't even need to build a gadget. :)
Many thanks my 60 year old Victorinox solved this problem in a flash. Colour was too loose; then ancient Crestogrip water pump pliers provided the squeeze!🤣👍
@@rodneyshepherd9120 you are welcome bro. :) Isn't internet amazing? This is what is was built for: sharing knowledge, information and experience. Welcome to the "2nd Enlightenment".
Just tried same method but without custom tool. I've used bottle opener from my Victorinox Spartan. Works like a charm! Thanks to author for showing general direction of disassembly!
Thanks heaps for this, was trying to not break things but seeing it done was much nicer. Had sand under the safety sleeve and I was struggling to us the safety feature.
Thanks for sharing this method...i am a big opinell fan...they are cheap (so you dont have to be sad when you lose it in the woods ore something)...good quality...fit perfectly in the hands...different sizes and they look beautiful. I have one on these with me every day...so i often have to remove the ring because sand and dirt comes under the ring (i take much care of my tools...once a month cleaning with weapon oil for every knife and a clean up at the end of the day after using it )...i always did the jerkof method because i couldnt find another one...two times i injured myself because this method is not safety. Thanks a lot. Greetings from Germany 🙂✌️
I believe if you take the collar of the No6 it is then UK legal as it is then a non locking knife with a blade under 3 inches. Great vid. Many thanks, Cheers, Ian
You'd think that the law would _require_ a locking mechanism on a knife the blade of which pivots on the handle, at the base of the blade; without a means to lock the blade, the knife is more dangerous to everyone, including the person holding it. Silly Brits!
@michaelthibault7930 we do have silly knife laws in the uk. The Opinel is actually French and the collar is the locking mechanism. For legal carry we have 75mm non locking and out of sight etc
If anyone is interesred in the "specialist pliers", theyre called snap ring pliers. If youre in the states, you can pick up one for about 5.99$. Greatly reduces the change of you damaging/scuffing up anything in the knife. Good method otherwise though^
just use simple narrow pliers. Put a collar in the open position, jam in the pliers, and open em up with the same hand you are holding them (that part is a bit awkward, but if you have all the digits in place - very doable).
You can also use those normal slim pliers and (while the pliers is closed) put the tip between the gap of the lock, now instead of gripping the handles what you do is you put your closed fist in between the plier's handles then open your hand. Doing this will enable you to spread the pliers which will open the top locking mechanism as if you have those reverse pliers.
Opinel No 10. Blade is 10cm. I use that one for most of my kitchen prep. Only dozen side is as it’s a folding blade it collects gunk in the locking mechanism so need regular cleaning. 👍
Hi Nick, I did try that but could not manage to make it work with mine as they kept slipping off. It’s a tricky old process to hold everything and open the handles of the needle nosed pliers with one hand. Respect to anyone who can manage it.
@@InfoZhedExplore Yes I can imagine it may or may not work. Your technique is an excellent bit of clever adaption and improvisation. Thanks for the video.
I recently bought three Opinel knives a 6, 7, and a 9 the two smaller ones were slick and opened well, the 9 did not, I found upon taking off the locking collar that the pin, has a mushroom end and the free end has been stamped into a mushroom end as well. It will take more than a punch to remove the pin.
Never sand the timber... If it swells up due to moisture, dry it out and the timber will shrink. When dry, get a q tip and dip it in Danish oil or Boiled Linseed Oil cut 50/50 with Pure Gum Terpene. Apply to the end grain at the collar end repeatedly until it wont absorb any more. (You can also apply to the inside of the blade slot if so inclined but I have not found that necessary).
Nice method. But, what to do if you lost the blocking collar? Without the block a no.6 or 7 is quite dangerous tool. Opinel does not sell replacement collars, because knives are already cheap (I was told by a major reseller).
interesting,,,, as i've olive oil baked my handle, and coffee stained my carbon blade, i want to heat up the collar till it blooms blue.... which apparently is within temperature ranges to not affect the spring of it.
I have a collar on a brand new Opinel that is damn near unmovable. I was considering either popping it off and stretching it, or adding a little lubrication. Thoughts?
If it has a wooden handle I would first try leaving it in a warm dry place for a few days. The wood is untreated and so soaks up moisture like a sponge. That should do the trick.
If you plan on using it for food prep I suggest coating the handle blade and inner collar with Howard Butcher Block Conditioner, it's food grade mineral oils with natural waxes and it help protect the blade from rust and helps keep water out of the handle. It also acts as a lube fo the locking collar and has made it smoother on mine. I highly suggest it.
So I need a vice, workbench, a single drywall screw, power drill, drill bits and a chunk of wood.... Since one can be an apartment dweller living in an urban center probably better to get a pair of snap ring pliers from Amazon for $8
I recently moved into my final home to retire. I had meant boxes which hasn't been opened in 3 decades. In one i found my Opinel #9 which i bought when i was 10. Wow. Memories. I took it everywhere when i was a kid. I cleaned and cooked fish with it. Today it just opens letters.
Le mieux reste d'écarter le collier avec une petite pince 🤷🏻♂️ c'est pas parce qu'il à été concu pour le faire avec n'importe quoi quand on n'a rien qu'il faut le faire avec n'importe quoi.
: Autre méthode, la bague en position verrouillée, à l' aide d' une grosse pince plate pincer la lame et l' ouvrir " en force" cela fera sauter la bague de verrouillage. Il est possible de le voir sur une des multiples vidéos sur l' Opinel, ou th-cam.com/video/5X4MxEFrfzQ/w-d-xo.html
You raise a very good point regarding removal making the smaller blades UK legal. However in my experience the collar needs to remain in place as it holds the wood together and prevents the blade from being loose. Thank you for sharing your thoughts 👍
You do realise that the shape of the handle is as it is for a reason? To open a knife, whether stiff (which I have never encountered but am sure it could happn) or not, you never need to pull the blade out with your thumbnail. All you do is gently tap the "butt end" of the knife on something hard with the blade in the downward position, the blade will pop out a bit every time and you then just pull it fully out and lock it as normal...
Now, every Opinel user on the Arabian Peninsula will know how to clean out the extremely fine sand from the locking mechanism with ease.
Same in Australia. Sand just gets in that pivot.
I used the bottle opener from an Viktorinox knife in exactly the same manner you showed here.
Worked like a charm... and I didn't even need to build a gadget. :)
Many thanks my 60 year old Victorinox solved this problem in a flash. Colour was too loose; then ancient Crestogrip water pump pliers provided the squeeze!🤣👍
@@rodneyshepherd9120 you are welcome bro. :)
Isn't internet amazing?
This is what is was built for: sharing knowledge, information and experience.
Welcome to the "2nd Enlightenment".
BRILLIANT!!!
Top man!
This makes more sense to me
Thank you for this simple and gentle method. Best regards from Germany NRW
Just tried same method but without custom tool. I've used bottle opener from my Victorinox Spartan. Works like a charm!
Thanks to author for showing general direction of disassembly!
Oh only if id read this comment before searching around my house for 15 minutes for a single piece of wood🤣
Finally something that worked easily.. wish I would have found this method before removing it the first time
Glad it helped 👍
Thank you, friend. I own one No. 8 Opinel knife, and I love it. Now that I know how to get the ring off, I love it even more.
Oh, finally a good video on TH-cam!
Thanks for the tip on removing the collar, I was struggling with the vices and pliers. Cheers to you
I struggled as well until coming up with this idea. Glad it helped you too 👍
👍👍👍Amazing tip mate 🤩🤩🤩
Keep up with the great work 🥰🥰🥰
Thanks heaps for this, was trying to not break things but seeing it done was much nicer. Had sand under the safety sleeve and I was struggling to us the safety feature.
Glad it helped you 👍
Many thanks from San Diego. very helpful.
Thanks for sharing this method...i am a big opinell fan...they are cheap (so you dont have to be sad when you lose it in the woods ore something)...good quality...fit perfectly in the hands...different sizes and they look beautiful. I have one on these with me every day...so i often have to remove the ring because sand and dirt comes under the ring (i take much care of my tools...once a month cleaning with weapon oil for every knife and a clean up at the end of the day after using it )...i always did the jerkof method because i couldnt find another one...two times i injured myself because this method is not safety. Thanks a lot. Greetings from Germany 🙂✌️
Glad it helped. Stay safe 😀
thanks. the locking ring around my wife's no.06 was on really tight. i was able to loosen it up a bit and oil the ring.
works good now.
Glad to be of some help 👍
Thank you , that helped. From South Africa.
I used the same method on Mt Andre Verdier knives.
Worked perfectly 👌
Glad it helped you 👍
And I was about to buy the circlip pliers! Thanks for the tip.
I believe if you take the collar of the No6 it is then UK legal as it is then a non locking knife with a blade under 3 inches. Great vid. Many thanks, Cheers, Ian
You'd think that the law would _require_ a locking mechanism on a knife the blade of which pivots on the handle, at the base of the blade; without a means to lock the blade, the knife is more dangerous to everyone, including the person holding it. Silly Brits!
@michaelthibault7930 we do have silly knife laws in the uk. The Opinel is actually French and the collar is the locking mechanism. For legal carry we have 75mm non locking and out of sight etc
Tysm!! I cant bilieve this actually worked!
If anyone is interesred in the "specialist pliers", theyre called snap ring pliers. If youre in the states, you can pick up one for about 5.99$. Greatly reduces the change of you damaging/scuffing up anything in the knife. Good method otherwise though^
Excellent, amazing advices , thanks for sharing 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
You are welcome. Glad it was of some use to you 👍
@@InfoZhedExplore I tried it today and actually its work 🙏👍🤝, many thanks from Egypt 🇪🇬
Absolutely brilliant! Thanks for sharing!
Swiss army knife hook works too. Thanks for the vid.
Thanks so much for this Tutorial. I was close to throw my Opinel with Olivewood away. Now it works as new. Great.
thanks a lot for this method, i didnt have any screw and wooden pieces around so i used a teaspoon handle instead.
Good job 👍
Handy trick! Worked like a charm so thanks for that!
Glad it helped you
Any bottle opener particularly a Victorinox SAK does the job like a dream
Thanks! I'll add that you can do that much simpler using the bottle opener on a Victorinox knife.
Really nice clear explanation. Thanks for this.
What brand of watch are you wearing?
Hi Chris, G-Shock. I find them just about indestructible and they last almost forever.
just use simple narrow pliers. Put a collar in the open position, jam in the pliers, and open em up with the same hand you are holding them (that part is a bit awkward, but if you have all the digits in place - very doable).
You can also use those normal slim pliers and (while the pliers is closed) put the tip between the gap of the lock, now instead of gripping the handles what you do is you put your closed fist in between the plier's handles then open your hand. Doing this will enable you to spread the pliers which will open the top locking mechanism as if you have those reverse pliers.
Thanks for sharing the information 👍
Thanks very much! I was about to just throw it away.
Excellent. Thank you!
Now I can have my smaller opinel as a legal carry and I don't have to buy the pliers. Class!
Thank you verry much. My friend. God bless you
Man, I just broke my locking ring trying to do this 😢
I use a pair of external seeger pliers, it works like a charm
Neat solution! Thanks 🙂
👍 thanks for your will explain methods
Glad it helped you 👍
👍🏻 Did it. Worked good. Thanks.
Good job 👍
Thank you so much!!! What size is that first Opinel you had, I really like that size and want to get one?
Opinel No 10. Blade is 10cm. I use that one for most of my kitchen prep. Only dozen side is as it’s a folding blade it collects gunk in the locking mechanism so need regular cleaning. 👍
Super, thank you very much for your video, thanks......
My Dad used split ring pliers or his SAK bottle opener.
Have seen needle nose pliers used too to just widen the collar a little. Thanks
Hi Nick, I did try that but could not manage to make it work with mine as they kept slipping off. It’s a tricky old process to hold everything and open the handles of the needle nosed pliers with one hand. Respect to anyone who can manage it.
@@InfoZhedExplore Yes I can imagine it may or may not work. Your technique is an excellent bit of clever adaption and improvisation. Thanks for the video.
Great method. I tried it and it works great. Thanks.
Price ?
I recently bought three Opinel knives a 6, 7, and a 9 the two smaller ones were slick and opened well, the 9 did not, I found upon taking off the locking collar that the pin, has a mushroom end and the free end has been stamped into a mushroom end as well.
It will take more than a punch to remove the pin.
Never sand the timber... If it swells up due to moisture, dry it out and the timber will shrink. When dry, get a q tip and dip it in Danish oil or Boiled Linseed Oil cut 50/50 with Pure Gum Terpene. Apply to the end grain at the collar end repeatedly until it wont absorb any more. (You can also apply to the inside of the blade slot if so inclined but I have not found that necessary).
My solution was a hybrid. Pulling the blade in the locked position created enough gap between the collar and handle to pry up with the flat blade.
Super Opinel ! Like👍👍👍
Thank you.
Good tip, thanks!
Nice method. But, what to do if you lost the blocking collar? Without the block a no.6 or 7 is quite dangerous tool.
Opinel does not sell replacement collars, because knives are already cheap (I was told by a major reseller).
I love stuff like this
Pretty much what I did except I used a flat head screwdriver to do the same thing.The head needs to be small enough to fit in the grove.
Ingenious. Simple but ingenious. Thank you.
Thanks 🧡
You’re welcome 😊
Why remove the lock! illegal?which county?
Well done sir!
Those specialist pliers are snap ring pliers C clip pliers.
Brilliant!
Found that you can use the bottle opener from a swiss army knife to do the same thing
When necessary i wash mine with a bit of ordinary soap and water, blow out any remaining water then rinse with alcohol to displace residual water.
Nice one....Very kool
use a clips pliers is more safe and better for the virole
Thank you. Cool.
The pliers are inexpensive.
Thank you!
interesting,,,, as i've olive oil baked my handle, and coffee stained my carbon blade, i want to heat up the collar till it blooms blue.... which apparently is within temperature ranges to not affect the spring of it.
Just get a pair of snap ring pliers. So much easier.
That's when you tap the little flat spot on the end of the handle it opens the knife..
: Une simple pince à circlips extérieur permet de déposer " l' opinel collar" et de le remettre en toute sécurité.
to make it extra safe put a piece of tape on the screw
I have a collar on a brand new Opinel that is damn near unmovable. I was considering either popping it off and stretching it, or adding a little lubrication. Thoughts?
If it has a wooden handle I would first try leaving it in a warm dry place for a few days. The wood is untreated and so soaks up moisture like a sponge. That should do the trick.
If you plan on using it for food prep I suggest coating the handle blade and inner collar with Howard Butcher Block Conditioner, it's food grade mineral oils with natural waxes and it help protect the blade from rust and helps keep water out of the handle. It also acts as a lube fo the locking collar and has made it smoother on mine. I highly suggest it.
Nice one thanks heaps ☺️
Don’t need any tools except a vice, electric drill and the wood screw you make it them.
Pure Gold🙏
Nr6 for me.The nr8 is to bulky
Thanks!
The same concept works with the bottle opener of a Swiss army knife.
Thank you!!!!
Thanks so much!!!!
So I need a vice, workbench, a single drywall screw, power drill, drill bits and a chunk of wood.... Since one can be an apartment dweller living in an urban center probably better to get a pair of snap ring pliers from Amazon for $8
no, the solution is to treat the end of the wood regularly with 2 -3 applications of danish oil.
leave the retaining ring alone
Opinel uses lock ring pliers.
I am a Texan I use my AR 15 or 12 gauge to remove it
: Penser à resserrer la bague, "opinel collar" à l' aide d' une pince multiprise avant de la remettre " en force".
Just use a key chain thin bottle opener, right to the point without the drama.
I saw a video of a young lady take it off with the cap lifter on her SAK
I would leave it alone. I bet once you reinsert it it will have too much play and that may be very hard to correct.
Can you claim the vat back for putting your pinkies in peril.
Could be a talking point at the next business meeting .
Party on Zhed ;-)
OR - just use a bottle opener instead of this wild contraption. Takes two seconds - just used my Victorinox knife's one.
I wouldn't call a screw in wood a wild contraption. I did try a multitool bottle opener though, and this worked well, cheers
Thought this contraption was great till I read your comment,, thanks, 😃
I recently moved into my final home to retire. I had meant boxes which hasn't been opened in 3 decades.
In one i found my Opinel #9 which i bought when i was 10. Wow. Memories. I took it everywhere when i was a kid. I cleaned and cooked fish with it.
Today it just opens letters.
or try bottle opener
I did it with a lock pick for cars
Great job 👍
6 minutes for that?…
Le mieux reste d'écarter le collier avec une petite pince 🤷🏻♂️ c'est pas parce qu'il à été concu pour le faire avec n'importe quoi quand on n'a rien qu'il faut le faire avec n'importe quoi.
: Autre méthode, la bague en position verrouillée, à l' aide d' une grosse pince plate pincer la lame et l' ouvrir " en force" cela fera sauter la bague de verrouillage. Il est possible de le voir sur une des multiples vidéos sur l' Opinel, ou th-cam.com/video/5X4MxEFrfzQ/w-d-xo.html
Removing the locking ring on the smaller ones makes them uk legal. Probably the only reason to remove it
You raise a very good point regarding removal making the smaller blades UK legal. However in my experience the collar needs to remain in place as it holds the wood together and prevents the blade from being loose. Thank you for sharing your thoughts 👍
You do realise that the shape of the handle is as it is for a reason? To open a knife, whether stiff (which I have never encountered but am sure it could happn) or not, you never need to pull the blade out with your thumbnail. All you do is gently tap the "butt end" of the knife on something hard with the blade in the downward position, the blade will pop out a bit every time and you then just pull it fully out and lock it as normal...
now put it back on
oh come on, just jam a flat screwdriver into the slot, opn it a bit and then lever up from the bottom