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Product Description
Reduce your footprint and shed some ounces with the Keith Titanium Ti5820 round chopsticks. Featuring a round design that’s smooth and easy on your hands, they’re made from uncoated titanium that’s tasteless, odorless, nontoxic, naturally hypoallergenic, and resistant to corrosion Read More
Are the metal chopsticks slippery as hell or what? I don't want to get the the sushi place and flap my meal all over the counter trying to eat it? If so, could I use some sandpaper or something to roughen the surfaces of the ends?
I haven't bought these specifically, but have been looking at buying some titanium chopsticks. These look like a mass produced and labeled design. You can find them cheaper for this particular manufacturer on Amazon.
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N5B5LLV/
I don't own these, but I did some research real fast, it looks like if you bought these off Amazon they're $14 a pair. (originally said 35, but I was wrong)
I just got a pair of the hollow-square version of these, they're pretty neat but I haven't eaten with them. One thing I did puzzle out almost immediately, is that the super nice carrying tube allows a lot of movement and rattle inside.
The silicon end cap plug has a couple of holes on the inside of it to hold the tip of the chopsticks, so what I did was I used the cardboard 'Keith Titanium' info card, and I rolled one side of it around one chopstick, and then did the same from the other side to the other stick. It made an S-shape with curls at both ends, and now I have a muffle inside my carrying tube that won't let the sticks knock against each other and raise a ruckus. A silicone plug with channels or holes for the chopsticks would be even better, but I worked with what was in the packaging and the results are fine by me.
Ive had three sets of these for around 5 years and love them. One set lives in the car for the occasional dinning out. One set lives in my backpacking bag. The last lives at home where they get used daily. The unpolished and uncoated ti provides the perfect texture for grip and they clean super easy.
On an interesting note, they float. I paid $12 for my sets off amazon, though with tarrifs and whatnot im not surprised the price has gone up.
TheBostonScramblerNot this pair. The description is incomplete but these chopsticks are hollow in the middle. Keith does make solid chopsticks though. They sell them in full size and mini, both with the Chinese style round tip. I’m sure you could use the solid ones for all kind of stuff.
If I find myself in the woods being chased by a grizzly bear, and am lucky enough to come upon a shack with a hasp inside and no lock or other way to secure the door. But I have these chopsticks in my bag and can use them to secure the hasp and hold the door closed. How much force applied by the grizzly bear on the door can they withstand before failing? Will the door fail first? Will the hasp? If the case fits through the hasp, how much stronger would that make it?
SteveFeinsteinYou came to the right place. These will certainly hold better than wood, and using the case + both chopsticks can just about double the force it can tolerate. The downside is that most abandoned shacks have crappy hardware, which is something we need to address as a society.
SteveFeinstein“How much force applied by the grizzly bear on the door can they withstand before failing?”
I just looked up the manual online. The answer is apparently 18.63 gigaNewtons.
Hope that was helpful.
<insert cap doff here>