🥄🔪 Elevate your outdoor game with the ultimate tactical spork!
The Ka-Bar Tactical Spork 9909 is a durable, lightweight 3-in-1 eating tool combining a spoon, fork, and knife in a foldable design. Made from rust-resistant polymer plastic with a sleek black finish, it’s dishwasher safe and perfect for camping, hunting, and fishing. Proudly made in the USA, this compact multitool ensures you’re always prepared with style and function.
Brand | KA-BAR |
Number of Pieces | 1 |
Material | Plastic |
Color | Black |
Product Care Instructions | Hand Wash Only |
Recommended Uses For Product | Hunting |
Special Feature | Rust Resistant |
Finish Type | black finish |
Included Components | Tactical Spork |
Style | Contemporary |
Is Stain Resistant | Yes |
Is Dishwasher Safe | Yes |
UPC | 617717299094 602919249947 |
Global Trade Identification Number | 00617717299094 |
Manufacturer | KABAR |
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 7.68 x 2.76 x 0.75 inches |
Package Weight | 0.04 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 7 x 2 x 1 inches |
Brand Name | KA-BAR |
Model Name | 9909 |
Suggested Users | unisex-adult |
Number of Items | 1 |
Part Number | 9909 |
Model Year | 2016 |
Size | 1 Pack |
Handle Material | Alloy Steel |
T**M
great for campers 🏕️
nice little spork and knife for when you go camping or eating in a car or park. The sport is versatile for solid food or soups. The knife is serrated and quite sharp. very tactical 👍🏽
K**�
Better than most Sporks
It seems that everyone makes a spork nowadays. Plastic, titanium, zinc, aluminum, stainless. You name it, they've made it into a spork. Sporks have been around since the late 19th century. Now, even Ka-bar makes a spork.Being a Former Marine and Ka-Bar fanboy I just had to have one or two. You never know when you need to hunker down and kill off a can of spam while hunting zombies to replenish your internal engine.This spork is made from Grilamid FWA, a high-strength, technical polymer. It's food safe and UV resistant. Apparently the plastic is made by the same company that makes Grivory plastics, which is common among knife manufacturers, especially Ka-Bar.The spork is lightweight with a proper fit & finish. I detected no burrs or excessive mold marks. Removing the knife was easy provided you grab the spork towards both ends and not the middle. There was no wobble or excessive movement when the spork was in it's closed position.The knife does a decent job cutting beef, chicken, and spam. It's a bit short to get any leverage when making long cuts in a steak as I had to place my index finger along the top spine of the blade. The blade is too narrow for spreading jams or butters, the spork end worked better.The spork, itself, works adequately enough. The tines are short and somewhat dull. I found that sharpening them up with a bit of emery board worked wonders. The bowl of the spoon is small for liquid soups, but works well on stews and beans. Traditionally, sporks have never worked well on soups. Drinking soup from a can, canteen, or cup/mug always works the best.Clean-up is easy. The plastic should handle temps up to 60°C. Safe for dishwashers, but the spork is light and might fly around.All-in-all, this is a decent spork. It's light and packs well. The plastic is very tough and should hold up better than a metal spork. Although the knife works, it's best to use your EDC knife along side the spork. While there are many choices for sporks, this is one of the better ones. It's all-inclusive in one small, lightweight package. Using the knife against zombies is just and added bonus.
J**P
The Night of a Thousand MREs
There I was, camping in the back yard with my boys, getting ready to eat an MRE and make some coffee by the fire.......I quickly realized that the plastic around the MRE was thick......too thick for my arthritic hands to tear open. I knew that the situation was dire; my boys were looking up to me to feed them. What was I supposed to do? Tell them to go back inside the house and look in the refrigerator????? No, no, a thousand times NO!! I would not send my boys out in to the night to find the deck and back door to the house with naught but a flashlight, weak from hunger and weeping at the sight of their father's helpless attempts to open the chili mac MRE. But what could I do?? What could any man do????Suddenly I remembered that my Ka-Bar Tactical Spork was in my back pack at my feet. With a gleam in my eye, crying "victory!!!!" I pulled out my utensil of badass-ness and removed the serrated knife from the fork-sheath......in no time, the MRE bag lay at my feet, a defeated and shamed foe, and I knew that on this night, deliciously pre-packaged preserved meals filled with enough sodium to make your eyes bleed would be consumed. My only regret was that I had no horn and mead with which to celebrate my achievement. Perhaps that will be my next purchase (if there is free shipping, of course.....)Long live Ka-Bar.....................
L**E
Small spoon, good knife (for plastic), and better than eating with your hands.
As others have said, the spoon is too small. It's sized and shaped like a baby spoon for little kids. The curve of the spoon doesn't match that of adult lips like a regular spoon does, and with the spork forks being there, you're going to have a lot of trouble eating anything with liquid in it, like broth or soup. You'll get a few drops of liquid at best in each sporkful, and end up drinking your broth out of the bowl like some kind of insane, crazed savage. But an insane, crazed savage with a decent spork.The spoon is big enough to heap up a good bite of solid foods though, even for a grown-up. so even if you are eating soup, you can get a good bite of the meat, noodles, and vegetables, just not a whole lot of broth along with it, due to the size, and the leakage and dribbling issues around the spork fork location and dimensions.Others have also mentioned the location of the handle's drain hole being too near the spoon and getting clogged with food. The tip of the knife is small enough to ream out any material that gets caught in that little slot. Between the knife tip and a rinse with water, you should be able to clean out the little hole just fine. The hole is there to allow ventilation of the inside of the handle, so water can drain and it can dry out in storage.The knife is where this tool really shines. Yes, it's only plastic, and you would probably hurt your joints or ligaments before managing to cut your skin with it, due to the effort required. But the tip is very pointy and the serrations on the blade make it very capable of cutting meat or any other food product you may be eating. Unless you're like my dear departed mother and believe in cooking all meats to the consistency of a hockey puck. In that case you may have slight difficulty, but it will still cut it. Will it be as good as a $90 Cutco handmade steak knife? No, of course not. But will it work? Yes, absolutely.I recently got dentures, and I can't bite food like I used to. A coworker bought pizza at work today, and oh, it was so good. I have to use a knife and fork to eat things that are too hard to bite through, since my teeth are now plastic just like this tool. The knife on this KaBar spork put the performance of the plastic throwaway knives we had in the breakroom cupboard to shame.I was able to easily cut the pizza toppings and crust with the knife, and the little spork forks worked for stabbing the pieces of pizza and transporting them to my mouth. A couple pieces fell off and had to be re-stabbed, but that happens with the finest sterling silver forks too. I wasn't worried about it.For $7, a tool that is very light, very durable, can save your life by transferring life-giving sustenance to your craw, and can be used as a deadly defense weapon if really needed (the knife), this tool is more than capable.
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2 months ago
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