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Show Your Vintage Knife

Private Lugnutz

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I generally don't collect tools made in Japan, but when I picked this pocket knife up at a flea market several years ago, the COO was irrelevant to my instantaneous desire. With the adjustable wrench built into the end, and the handy little marlinspike, it was an immediate "how much?" And, say what you will, I have yet to see a vintage US made equivalent.
 

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gpw_42

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Lugz, that tool is cool as he!! Why’ve you been holding out on us for so long? ��

Is the wrench useful, or more of an eye-catcher? Utility is a big part of the reason I’ve gone to carrying a TL-29 full time.
 

Private Lugnutz

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Lugz, that tool is cool as he!!...[ ]... Is the wrench useful, or more of an eye-catcher?
Definitely not just a gimmick. The jaw and the mechanism are nice and tight. Solid tool. Small, obviously, so vintage bike wrench class. But solid.

Why’ve you been holding out on us for so long? ��
I'm pacing myself! :)
 

Private Lugnutz

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Here is a 1943 Taylor's Eye Witness made for the British Army that I will always cherish because it came as a gift from a friend and colleague in England. Those scales are Bexoid, a composite akin to Bakelite. If you see them with red fiber scales, like vintage fuse pullers, they were made in India closer to the Pacific action. Earlier in the war they wouldn't have the 'whale jaw' can opener blade. In 1944 and later they would have an additional bottle opener at the back of that blade. The marlinspike is lethal.

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ssdave

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....
 

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Gear Wolf

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Here is a 1943 Taylor's Eye Witness made for the British Army that I will always cherish because it came as a gift from a friend and colleague in England. Those scales are Bexoid, a composite akin to Bakelite. If you see them with red fiber scales, like vintage fuse pullers, they were made in India closer to the Pacific action. Earlier in the war they wouldn't have the 'whale jaw' can opener blade. In 1944 and later they would have an additional bottle opener at the back of that blade. The marlinspike is lethal.

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Ugh, now that I've seen this, I'll have to get one...much to my wife's dismay! :bounce:
 

thehorse13

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I'm not really a knife guy but I do have one that I love. This hawkbill Ka-bar belonged to my great grandfather and he used it to prune tomato plants in his garden. Today it continues performing the same task and will do so long after I'm gone.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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It is marked HoFFritz.
I don't either, but I saw a really nice one just this morning. It had a roe buck foreleg for scales, including the hooves!

...mine is the oldest on this thread.
Do tell, Dave. Who made it? And when? I don't recognize it.

Ugh, now that I've seen this, I'll have to get one...much to my wife's dismay! :bounce:
Happy to be of service! :D

I'm not really a knife guy but I do have one that I love. This hawkbill Ka-bar belonged to my great grandfather and he used it to prune tomato plants in his garden. Today it continues performing the same task and will do so long after I'm gone.
Nice one.
 

83VillageRepair

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I have had many of the GP knives over the years. I think every tool kit that I got in the Navy as an ET had one. The 1961 Camillus I got from my maternal grandad. I have carried it for 20+ years. The 1992 version i found the other day in a junk SL320 I purchased at an estate sale.
Note the difference in the blades.
Wade
View media item 109214View media item 109215
 
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Onator

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I’m still in rookie status until I get my 10-posts. Knocking one more off here and as soon as I hit 10, I’ll post the pictures of just a few of the knives my Dad left me. One of them has a bit of brass corrosion that I could use some guidance on.
 

ttpete

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I’m still in rookie status until I get my 10-posts. Knocking one more off here and as soon as I hit 10, I’ll post the pictures of just a few of the knives my Dad left me. One of them has a bit of brass corrosion that I could use some guidance on.

If the knife has a leather scabbard, the leather can cause green corrosion on the brass parts. The tanning process causes this.
 

Onator

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Yes-its green alright. Is it best to leave it out or to “air” it occasionally? Or how else would I avoids this?
 
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gpw_42

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Onator, I look forward to some pics of your dad's knives. Welcome to the thread!

The green is called "verdigris" and as ttpete said, is a byproduct of the tanning process. Takes a long time to form, and is basically corrosion between the leather and brass or other metal. You can scratch the verdigris off, but typically it'll return. I think it's in the category of "less is more." I'm also willing to learn new ways to deal with it.
 
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gpw_42

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83villagerepair, thanks for adding your pics of the MIL-K-818s...those are great comparison shots!

Amazing how much work was done with TL-29s or MIL-Ks in the days before everybody had a Leatherman or Gerber multitool. My ROTC sergeant major coached me on getting a Leatherman before I went in the Army; I carried one every day that I was in camo. But today, it's a vintage TL-29 in my pocket daily.
 

83VillageRepair

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Gpw 42
First time I saw a leatherman was in the late 80s when I was stationed in the pentagon. A transfer from Whitehouse communications had one. They were issued to them. My only problem with them is I see people use them instead of a correct tool. Like the the old saw about to a guy whose only tool is a hammer every problem looks like a nail.

Wade
 

Dave455

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Definitely a thread I need to contribute to!

Following Private Lugnutz British Army Jack Knife, here are a couple more with similar origins.

The knife with the black “Bexoid” scales is another army knife, but this one is unusual in that it has no tin opener, making it slim to carry, and is in very good condition.

Most of the knives from this era are superb to use, partly because of the quality of the steel, but also because of the quality of the grinding. The blades are generally ground relatively thin, and incredibly consistently. They can be sharpened with just a couple of strokes, and if blunt, re sharpened just as easily.

Many modern knives, despite some being incredibly expensive, often have very poorly ground blades. The “whetted portion” (to use an English cutlers term) is huge, impossible to sharpen without a good deal of re profiling, and if found on a used knife would be deemed in need of re grinding by any experienced user.

However, I digress!

The other knife shown is a British “Royal Navy” pattern jack knife. These things are incredibly solid by modern standards (like most navy equipment of the period) and incorporate metal scales. The blades are still very well ground and take a keen edge.

This one is by Rodgers, a maker that is regarded highly, although as far as navy knives are concerned I prefer other makers, as the blades on the Rodgers knives sit at a slight angle to the handle when open. I have probably close to fifty of these knives, all in good condition, and many unissued. I have unissued examples with wartime dates, and also from the very last batch produced for the Ministry of Defence in the 1980’s.

Rodgers, like many names from the British cutlery industry, went bankrupt some years ago. The name lives on, but bought up by a company that refuses, or is perhaps unable, to make knives of any quality. There are still some quality knives available in Sheffield, including military patterns, but you need a good eye to tell the trash from the treasure! Most is the former!

Both the knives shown below are my daily “users”. I use them regularly, since I have yet to find anything better!
 

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gpw_42

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Onator, that big (V42?) is a heckuva way to make a splash on entry! Nothing like diving right in; thanks for sharing both knives. Any history on the big Collins?

Dave455 thanks for showing us your MOD-issued knives. Interesting to see some of what is out there, that is "non-standard" for us here in the US. I need to get busy and find my buddy's knife, which is around here. Somewhere....:)

Keep 'em coming, guys!
 
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Dave455

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found this knife while doing some hiking in Alaska. looks like it might be a bit old. don't know anything about it. It is marked HoFFritz.


https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=1070961&stc=1&d=1605403549

Hoffritz were an American cutlery importer / distributor.

I have a photograph in a book of, presumably, Mr Hoffritz visiting a Sheffield cutler in the late 1940’s. The picture isn’t really good enough to reproduce. Mr Hoffritz was described on the original picture as a “big shot” from the U.S.

Hoffritz knives were obviously sourced all over. I have seen similar German knives to the one shown made in relatively recent years
 

Dave455

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Dave455 thanks for showing us your MOD-issued knives. Interesting to see some of what is out there, that is "non-standard" for us here in the US. I need to get busy and find my buddy's knife, which is around here. Somewhere....:)

Thankfully, most of my knives pre date the existence of the Ministry of Defence (1964)! Many in the industry trace the decline in the quality of British defence equipment to the MOD’s formation!

I can think of nothing produced to an MOD specification that exceeds the quality of what predated it! Some were the equal, but only because the MOD hadn’t messed about with the spec!

Maybe someone can help me out...?

Yes, get busy finding that hidden treasure!
 
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ttpete

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Hoffritz were an American cutlery importer / distributor.

I have a photograph in a book of, presumably, Mr Hoffritz visiting a Sheffield cutler in the late 1940’s. The picture isn’t really good enough to reproduce. Mr Hoffritz was described on the original picture as a “big shot” from the U.S.

Hoffritz knives were obviously sourced all over. I have seen similar German knives to the one shown made in relatively recent years

Back in the 1970s, there were Hoffritz stores here. They were similar to Henckels stores in Germany.
 
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gpw_42

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Do these count?

Well, it's not a sword! Is that a bayonet for a Lebel rifle? I struggle to ID most non-US gear.

I'm comfortable with bayonets, but specifically want to discourage swords, in part because I don't want this thread to be all military knives. There are tons of "old knives" out there which are of varying levels of interest and quality, plus I want this thread to be welcoming/open to folks with any knife. If we get TOO military focused, we'll close out the interesting old jack knives and what have you that make up a large part of the knife world. That's a great thing about Dave455's military knives, they open up the UK produced blades, which we haven't seen much of.
 

SweetD

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WWI Remington "Rolling Block" bayonet. My grandfather had it, no idea where it came from (no provenance with our family that I know of).

Blade is a little over 8". Patinad, but in good shape overall. Not worth much I don't think from a quick search. But cool nonetheless.

IMG_20201228_193957760.jpg

It's one of those antiques where I should really just clean it up and polish it as the value is so low that it doesn't matter. And it would look really cool cleaned up.

:beer:
 

ttpete

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Well, it's not a sword! Is that a bayonet for a Lebel rifle? I struggle to ID most non-US gear.

I'm comfortable with bayonets, but specifically want to discourage swords, in part because I don't want this thread to be all military knives. There are tons of "old knives" out there which are of varying levels of interest and quality, plus I want this thread to be welcoming/open to folks with any knife. If we get TOO military focused, we'll close out the interesting old jack knives and what have you that make up a large part of the knife world. That's a great thing about Dave455's military knives, they open up the UK produced blades, which we haven't seen much of.

There were some bayonets that resemble short swords. I believe one was made for the British Martini-Henry rifle.
 
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gpw_42

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There were some bayonets that resemble short swords. I believe one was made for the British Martini-Henry rifle.

Bayonets? OK.
Swords? No thanks.

Either way, we're stretching the meaning of "garage" in Garage Journal; don't want to get too far afield and end up losing the thread.
 

Trapps

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Loving this thread!

Another of my Grandfather's tools I inherited:

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:beer:

EDIT 9FEB23, replaced picture links.
 
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Dave455

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^ That’s a nice knife with a well ground blade. Obviously some age to it, so great to inherit it in that condition, and even the box!

Barlow knives are a very old traditional British pattern, I seem to recall they date back to the mid 1600’s.

When the American cutlery industry started making it’s own knives it used very different practices from the U.K. In England most pocket knives were basically hand made. In huge numbers yes, but still hand made, hence there were so many different patterns.

In the U.S. the process was mechanised from the start, so patterns had to be standardised. The “Barlow Knife” being a simple (and slim) design, but with the longer bolster making it stronger, was one of the first to be chosen. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!
 

Private Lugnutz

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Picked up this survival knife at the flea this morning. Clip point with a serrated saw blade spine. Appears to be homemade. Aluminum two piece scales riveted together and crudely flattened and filed down on the flip side. Can't see the tang, but it goes through. Pommel attached with two screws. I don't know how vintage this is, but I like it.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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Details.
 

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Private Lugnutz

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A popular source, apparently, Pete. If you recall, I have another homemade fixed blade knife, made out of a "Marvel" (Armstrong-Blum) power hacksaw blade, posted here on this thread back on page 1, in post #9, linked here. That guy used the part of the blade that is marked, which was cool. That one had a lead handle. This one is much lighter.
 
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gpw_42

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Picked up this vintage 4-blade knife today. Made in USA on main blade makes me think late 40s/early 50s, otherwise it’s a dead ringer for WW2. Bone scales.
 

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gpw_42

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NFS.

Picked up this old 4-blade USGI "scout knife" over the weekend, and overlooked the PROPERTY US GOVT mark on the blade. With an investment of around $2, I'm pleased, even considering the desicated condition of the scales. 60s-2008ish production marks, based on the CAMILLUS/NEW YORK/USA blade markings.

I bought it with the idea of replacing the broken plastic scales with jigged bone, or maybe some sort of exotic wood (ebony, cocobolo, etc.) and making it a user. Then I saw the GI markings, and I'm now scratching my head about how best to proceed. In current condition, it's not a user, nor really a collectible. I don't know of a source for replacement plastic scales.

Suggestions?

[edit: the obverse scale is in worse condition than the pic appears. It is cracked and about to go to pieces, probably worse than the broken scale on the reverse side.]
 

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piehammer

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Western L66 and Schrade-Walden 147 that were my Dad's.

Colonial Scout knife - seems to be 'unofficial'. Found in Okauchee Lake in WI as a kid.

Sabre Japanese pocket knife with broken blade. I think this was a find as a kid as well.

Schrade Old Timer - I don't think this one is old, but included it anyway.

Case M3 Finn - Also probably not vintage.

If anyone has more info on these, would love to hear about them.
 

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gpw_42

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Piehammer thanks for joining the discussion! Really like your Western and Case M3 Finn. The Westerns are really growing on me, as a group.
 
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