>>775816I had the Wingman for almost 2 years, I actually just lost it on a camping trip in the woods last weekend. It's far from perfect in terms of design but still very usable and handy. It felt very robust and durable, no part of it ever broke on me, but there were a few things about it that irritated me. My biggest complaint was how difficult the scissors were to get out, the thumb pad is very small and your only leverage for prying the scissors out is a skinny and uncomfortable metal leg that digs under your thumb nail when you push on it. Without frequent cleaning / adjusting the tightness of the rivets the scissors would often get so stuck in their slot that I'd have to pry the scissors out with the edge of a car key. However the scissors and knife locking into place when pulled out was nice, even if the lock on the scissors did disengage every once in a while during use. I was never able to get smaller tools in each handle to come out on their own, it was always all two or three come out at once and then you've got to push the ones you don't want back in. None of the small internal tools lock into place, so when using the screwdrivers they would often fold in and I'd jam my hand into whatever I'm working on. The can opener / bottle opener was great, sharp and worked very well, I've probably opened close to 50 cans of soup when camping without issue. There was also a small curved blade tool in the handle, not sure what it was specifically for but I used it for stripping coaxial cable a lot (I'm a telecom technologist by trade), it worked very well for that with some practise. The pliers were the best part because they're spring loaded, I believe that's essential for any multi-tool, non-spring loaded pliers are a fucking pain to use.