Made in the USA. Made Strong. Made right. Protect your chip cards with our largest carbon fiber RFID bifold ID wallet. RFID protection blocks radio frequency signals from reading your cards in your pocket. Your identity should be yours, and yours alone. We build our wallets to last. Based on over 20 years of customer experience, we know that you can expect a RAGGEDedge wallet to last 4 to 6 times longer then an average wallet. Your mileage may vary.
R**N
Do NOT waste your money
It is light and well built. If that is why I bought it or how it is advertised, I would rate it highly, but it is billed as RFID blocking. If I could give it zero stars I wouldAbsolutely does not work. I have three different key cards for three different jobs (a federal building, a local building, and fleet entry). I tried all three key cards, separately, in the different slots in the wallet. The results: I was able to gain entry into the work areas. This wallet did not block anything except money from staying in my wallet to buy this item. I will be contacting the seller and/or the seller for a RMA.
J**.
Cool Looking Wallet and Made In USA
Cool Looking Wallet and Made In Floyd,Virginia USA, only Had it a couple Days and Love it.
S**E
Its too small for the amount of card it states ...
Its too small for the amount of card it states it could hold. My husband didn't want to use it because he thought the thread would break.
R**R
Amazing Product
I do not have this particular wallet, but one made by Ragged Edge out of the same material. It is great. I purchased it about five years ago. I had been using a standard leather wallet. I had to replace it every year (they literally fell apart) and if I worked outside during the summer, I would have to dry my money out at the end of the day. I came across the Ragged Edge wallet in a Hammacher Schlemmer (Sp?) Catalog. It was pricey ($80), but claimed to be "dishwasher safe", so I decided to try it. Five years later it is a little warn, but holding up well. It really does protect its contents from water. I'll agree it does look like a kid's toy and is hard to break in, but it beats the hell out of spending $30 or $40 a year on a leather wallet. If there ever comes a time my Ragged Edge wallet wears out, I will definitely replace it with another one. Great product.
S**7
What magic material is this wallet really made of?
OK so nobody ever tells me my wallet is good looking. When I press my friends for their honest opinion, their answers range from "ugly* to" cheap ", although the recycled nature of the material makes them say, " well I guess that's cool. " Personally, I like the way it looks, especially when it's full of cash, and I like its slim lightweight form factor. It's very comfortable in my front pocket, where I prefer to keep it.One really interesting point is the RFID blocking property of the wallet. I didn't have any faith in that claim when I first bought it, and didn't much care whether it was true or not. At work, we use a card key system for entry, and my card key was getting denagnetized very often. Anytime I kept it near my cell phone for more than a few minutes, it would become useless, which was really annoying and embarrassing. When I first got my wallet, I had a key card that had been slightly denagnetized, but I could still get it to work if I held it just right and jiggled it just right on the reader, I could usually get the door open, but it would take at least 30 seconds, which was a big problem when I was pushing a deadline or needed to get to the restroom quickly. But I wasn't going to take that card to security for the umpteenth time, because I had been through so many cards in the previous year that they were charging me $10 to fix it each time, which made the situation awkward and stupid. But then the wallet came along, and I kept my card key in it, along with the usual credit and debit cards, and within a few days, my card key was working fine. A week later, the card worked better than any of the new cards I'd been issued. I asked security whether they had done maintenance on the readers and they said no. I did a test, and left my card next to my cell phone for 20 minutes , which made the card unreadable again. But instead of getting a new card, I carried it in my wallet. Two days later, the card was readable again. It was weak, I had to jiggle it and hold it just right, but it worked. A couple more days in the wallet and the card was working like a charm. The card signal is so healthy that my card doesn't even need to touch the reader in order to work, I can just swipe it within an inch or so and the door unlocks. I don't know much about RFID, but my limited knowledge of the topic makes me think my own experience must be flawed somehow, and that there must be some other coincidental factor at work, so I verified the result of my test three more times in the last year, and each time, my wallet heals my key card. Well now I'm tired of trying to figure it all out. I don't care whether anyone believes me or not. The bottom line for me is that my key card works, and whatever magic is in the carbon fiber sail cloth can stay in my pocket for as long as I own pants, because that other property they boast about it, the durability thing, that's no joke. This sumbeehitch is built to last. Leather wallets are like tissue paper compared to this. But similarly, this wallet will break in over time to achieve a soft and supple feel, but without falling apart The construction and materials make this wallet roughly as durable as if it were carved from granite and coated with titanium armor, which arguably might yield a better looking product, but would likely be more expensive, and definitely be a total fail at the crucial task of carrying my cash and cards comfortably in my pocket
E**S
One Star
I like how i see Mclovin from super bad
Trustpilot
2 days ago
2 months ago