mwilding
Contributor
You can do more damage with safety shears than with nail clippers and they aren't allowed either...
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Yes, but I would not expect logic to come into play in what you can and can not have.mwilding:You can do more damage with safety shears than with nail clippers and they aren't allowed either...
When did TSA start taking nail clippers again (if indeed this is true)??mwilding:You can do more damage with safety shears than with nail clippers and they aren't allowed either...
According to the latest list, both nail clippers & nail files are OK for carry on, as are round nose scissors. Hey, corkscrews are OK to carry on...When did TSA start taking nail clippers again (if indeed this is true)??
I just flew from Cincinnati to Washington-Dulles and my pocket knife was "flagged" because of the corkscrew. I heard the TSA X-Ray person and the comment was "looks like a corkscrew here" before my bag was searched (just to get the knife w/ corkscrew out). I had checked the bag the prior week and put the knife in my bag so it wouldn't be in my pocket, but I forgot it when I was repacking on Monday to go out again. I really makes me wonder if the knife would have been allowed if not for the corkscrew.Bob3:Hey, corkscrews are OK to carry on...
rab:I just flew from Cincinnati to Washington-Dulles and my pocket knife was "flagged" because of the corkscrew. I heard the TSA X-Ray person and the comment was "looks like a corkscrew here" before my bag was searched (just to get the knife w/ corkscrew out). I had checked the bag the prior week and put the knife in my bag so it wouldn't be in my pocket, but I forgot it when I was repacking on Monday to go out again. I really makes me wonder if the knife would have been allowed if not for the corkscrew.