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Product Description
Designed for backpacking, camping, and traveling, the Keith Ti5310 titanium cutlery set is equally suited for picnicking, throwing into your emergency prep kit, or simply using around the home or office. Each set includes three pieces (a knife, a fork, and a spoon), and you’ll get two sets to add to your cookware collection Read More
As a part of my EDC kit, these have been the best utensils to carry and have handy. Beats eating with plastic forks and knives at places like a food truck court. Less weight and waste.
We bought these with the intention of using them camping, but they quickly became our go to set. They're perfect size and are extraordinaly lightweight
The Keith Ti flatware set is functional. There are one or two potential downsides, but they're far outweighed by the price-performance ratio, which is half that of the equivalent Nipponese brand name evoking winter summits.
Downsides:
The brass ferrule seems like a good idea (keep the pieces from banging together and making unwanted noise), but it's just too fiddly, not to mention easy to lose.
Likewise with the screw-close mini-biner. Too much work to open/close.
For those to whom it matters, the Keith Ti flatware is matte finish, not polished.
Inconsistent thickness on the knife. I got 4 sets, and one of the knives is super-chunky compared to the other three, making it perform worse for cutting and weigh more.
None of the above remotely resembles a deal-breaker, or is even worth docking a star. The mini-biner and ferrule are easily replaced with a paracord Loop of appropriate thickness, and the others are not worth worrying about at this price point.
My wife and I have been using these a lot since they arrived, and they work great. Obviously not an amazingly sharp knife, but that's to be expected. Extremely lightweight and useful for trips and hikes.
The forks and spoons are not bad, on par with other titanium cutlery that you can buy at REI or EMS.
The knives are too dull to use for anything but spreading. They're about as sharp as a disposable plastic knife.
I think that the carabiner and the threaded retainer are both quite impractical.
It's not a terrible product. But I can't recommend it, since there are so many better lightweight cutlery solutions out there.