A dull blade would mixed with zombies squeezing through a door may make cutting off your hand like the more prudent solution.
I can't imagine I could ever do that, though. But who knows what one could do when there's no other option.
Scott
Well yeah but he was already up on the roof long enough to be all sunblistered and have the blood on his raw wrist dry and brown by the time we saw him begging and such. And the zombies never broke through. So he had all the time in the world.
And hell, even with a dull blade he could have still tossed some grit in there to keep cutting once he got a groove. That's the reason for cutting slurry am I right?
If he was even only able to cut through half of that half inch bolt that the cuffs were attached to then he should of been able to kick and yank on it until it broke. The thing was unsupported for a full foot in the middle. That's plenty of leverage.
It's just I've just cut galvanized gas pipe before with a hacksaw and that stuff is tough. The hacksaw in a mechanic's toolbox should obviously have a metal-cutting blade on it (and spare blades in the box for that matter)
I can't be the only kid that grew up where dad said "Use the regular saw for wood, and use the hacksaw for metal." All these shows that go "You can't use a hacksaw on metal, it'll dull the blade." just make me go "Huh?"
You know what would have been funny though? If the the camper guy had some spare cutting wheels in the toolbox and one had rolled out to Meryl, not the good kind, the kind that crumble when you look at them sideways. Then he would have to try to use that to cut free.