I eventually found some US Army marked knives, which were quite rare.
Indeed!
IIRC, last year there were only about 14 of those knives known among GMTK collectors worldwide.
Interesting. I didn't know anyone attempted to put a number on it.
gpw_42 said:
Undoubtedly, there were 10s of thousands made for Uncle Sam during WW2, but finding them today is difficult, at best.
Statistically, ~157,000 GMTK's got sent to the ETO by late 1944, and all of them that got shipped after September 1942 (when the Ordnance Dept took over and re-defined the Motor Vehicle Mechanics Tool-Set) included a 41-K-370. I've never seen any figures for the Pacific, but it was a much smaller number. So, apparently ~156,986 are still out there somewhere.
Here are the wartime Army electrician’s knives I still have hanging around.
The knife at the bottom is a TL-29 made by Camillus for the Signal Corps.
The next knife up is a 41-K-370 made by PAL Blade Company in Holyoke, Massachusetts for the QMC and the Ordnance Dept. It's the only one of the four without brass liners.
The second knife from the top is also a PAL Blade 41-K-370 with a very faint “U.S. ARMY” marking (all that remains is parts of the “S.”, parts of the “R.”, and the entire “Y”), rubbed out with use and age.
PAL and Union Cutlery (Ka-Bar is the brand) were making electrician's knives for the QMC and Ordnance Dept for 41-K-370 supply, as opposed to the Signal Corps for Signal Corps supply, hence the "U.S. ARMY“ marking rather than the “TL-29” marking on handles and/or tangs, as Don alluded to.
Sadly, and oddly, you won’t find this information in any knife book (Silvey, Price, Trzaska, etc) or any knife site, except for a few forums where I have queried the experts and shared my research. In every sense, from their construction to their use, these knives should be thought of as 41-K-370 knives, not TL-29’s, and I got Frank Trzaska to agree with me, but I’m afraid I agree with him that despite the historical facts the “TL-29” name will forever be inextricably associated with any and all two-blade military electrician’s knives, Signal Corps or other. And it has to be said, the Federal Standard Stock Catalog did copy the Signal Corps spec, although they are slightly shorter.
Exacerbating the issue is Camillus. Records show that Camillus did sell some 'TL-29'-marked electrician's knives right off of their production line to the “Army” (probably Ordnance Dept), “Engineers” (undoubtedly the Corps of Engineers), and “QMC” (self-explanatory) as 41-K-370 spec knives, before the contracts with PAL and Union were let. They were never intended for the Signal Corps and their "TL-29" marking is strictly an interesting artifact of their production process and customer (ORD, Engineers, QMC) efficiency.
You can read my study, with documents and back-up,
here.
The knife at the top is a mystery to me. It’s a Robeson. No bail. I don’t believe it’s a legit 41-K-370/GMTK knife. I believe it's a one-off.