Wave® Plus Fun Facts: Dive Into The History Of A Leatherman Legend
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The Spice Girls had conquered the world, only 1/3rd of Americans had a cell phone in their pocket, and cargo shorts were *everywhere*.
Meanwhile at Leatherman HQ, the original Wave multi-tool was moving through the design process under the watch of an up-and-coming engineer named Ben Rivera. Revealed publicly for the first time that same year at SHOT (Shooting, Hunting and Outdoor Trade Show), the Wave quickly became the brand’s best-selling model, a title it has held pretty much ever since.
In honor of its 25th birthday, here then are 7 fun facts about the Wave multi-tool that may surprise even Leatherman diehards.
The original product brief called for a deluxe version of the Pocket Survival Tool®. But when engineers saw the curved shape of the knife’s blade, the Wave earned a new, more fitting nickname.
In a Leatherman and multi-tool industry first, the Wave allowed users to access the blades with one hand—without having to open the pliers.
Hailed as an instant masterpiece by fans, the Wave also won critical kudos from an unexpected source: curators at MoMA, who inducted it into the museum’s permanent collection in 2004.
Our fans are true explorers. Many have found a forgotten, hidden lanyard eye on the Wave. Like adventurers of yore, you can find the treasure online, but it’s more fun to discover it yourself.
Even though the Wave was great to begin with, everything can be better. In 2004, it evolved with stronger jaws and all-locking features. Thirteen years later, it upgraded to replaceable wire cutters, an improved sheath, and, like a crab leaving behind a shell for a bigger one, a special new title — the Wave Plus.
While the Wave doesn’t have a star on the Walk of Fame (yet), it’s made scene-stealing cameos in everything from The X-Files to Rush Hour. But fame hasn’t changed its hard-working attitude. It’s just as happy in a pocket as a celebrity’s hand.
…is now our CEO. Back when he was an engineer, Ben Rivera spent two years creating and fine-tuning the original Wave.
Listen in as Rivera recaps how this iconic tool took form, why it was almost removed from the product line 6 years later, and its lasting legacy.