Spyke
vaionkoreply
sopuli.xyz

Well that's definitely not what I expected. I got this as a gift for working at a company making electrical panels. Thank you!

49
lemmy.world

The CEO thought it was a great gift for everyone because he is always golfing.

75
lemmy.world

Yeah, basically the Swiss Army Knife version of the divot tool.

The version below is pretty common, a golf bag should never be without one. Though, I have seen people use keys instead.

26
shalafireply
lemmy.world

I knew it was a divot tool, but how do you use one?

7
lemmy.world

Basically you poke the fork bits into the ground next to the divot at an angle and then push down to raise the divot.

6
shalafireply
lemmy.world

Oh! Would have thought that would require longer tines, but I've never golfed, guess the divots are smaller than I imagined.

3
lemmy.world

They're pretty much used to keep the green from having a bunch of impact craters all over it. The ball coming down from a high angle can leave a decent dent in the ground.

3

The one to the top is for fixing divots on a golf course. The prongs to the bottom are for screwing/unscrwwing golf cleets on shoes.

15

I think that's a multitool for golfing. You can fix divots in the grass, replace cleats on golf shoes, clean them up, etc.

9

It's a knife, what looks like a fork, and (by process of elimination) the other must be a spoon!

6

You reached the end

Multitool with a knife, retractable brush and two weird things | Spyke