Private Lugnutz
Well-known member
No idea! Honestly, I was just cracking wise, thinking you meant "rehoned", and you had made a fat-fingered m/n typo!Finding them a new home. What is the correct word for that?

No idea! Honestly, I was just cracking wise, thinking you meant "rehoned", and you had made a fat-fingered m/n typo!Finding them a new home. What is the correct word for that?

I'd argue right along with you. A good sturdy knife and I never had one let me down.I still do (a 1963 I got from my Great Aunt, an original WAC and lifer who retired in '73), and I have one in the glove compartment of my truck, and in the top drawer of my toolbox down the basement as well, and I have pressed others I have found into the hands of my children. I am on record here and in a long-lost thread up on the General Discussion board (where I probably argued too vigorously with all the Swiss Army proponents...) saying it's my favorite knife. Stainless steel, indestructible, comfortable grip, and looks great, too!
Fair enough. That classic pattern is a great combination and I also have them in toolbox and desk drawer.. It's nice to carry something familiar and what suits you.This knife was once known as a "G.P." (for general purpose), but most collectors, including our thread host, call them MIL-K's, short for their full MIL-K-818 military standard designation. I read an early draft of an excellent and well-researched study he has done on them in which I was shocked to learn that they were in development, but not yet issued, as far back as late WWII.
I still do (a 1963 I got from my Great Aunt, an original WAC and lifer who retired in '73), and I have one in the glove compartment of my truck, and in the top drawer of my toolbox down the basement as well, and I have pressed others I have found into the hands of my children. I am on record here and in a long-lost thread up on the General Discussion board (where I probably argued too vigorously with all the Swiss Army proponents...) saying it's my favorite knife. Stainless steel, indestructible, comfortable grip, and looks great, too!














I think you mean FUBAR'd.so often end up SNAFU’d.

This is good advice for ANY knife that blades at both ends on the same spring!There's one caution with those MIL-K knives. Apparently the backsprings on some were not heat-treated properly and are brittle. In normal use — one blade/tool open at a time — you'd never discover this. But if you open halfway two blades that are on the same backspring, odds are the backspring may snap due to the extra stress. (You'll see some MILK-Ks offered on ebay, usually for parts, that have a broken backspring.)
So the common way of displaying these tools — two blades fully open and two halfway — should be avoided unless you're careful to make sure each backspring has one that's fully open and one that's half-open. Moreover, the half-open blade should be opened second and closed first, the point being never to have two blades on the same backspring half open at the same time.
I found this out the hard way... Luckily for me, although Camillus had gone out of business when this happened, a former Camillus employee named Tom Williams (since deceased) had a supply of NOS backsprings for MIL-K knives and repaired mine for a nominal charge.
Edit: The MIL-Ks fall within the general "camper" pattern of four blade knives, and so I've become allergic to doing that display trick with any camper-pattern knife, no matter who made it and when.

That's a very nice line up.Here are some of my wood handle knives.
Thank you sir!That's a very nice line up.
That's a timber scribe. Used to carve on wooden barrels and / or wooden pallets, or trees (for surveyors) etc. Hibbard, Spencer and Bartlett # 2998. Ebony handles, I think (maybe cocobolo - sometimes it's hard to tell.) 3 & 5/8" closed. Here's a couple of pics.The numeral 7 blade. Second row.


Here is one I had, from above, but passed it onCool. I have a fixed blade version somewhere. I don't think I've ever seen one that folded.

And a very nice case to store it in! Seriously, @blunn, I am jealous and inspired. Mine are in a drawer. It's a cool drawer, in a cool old chest, but they're hidden, not displayed. I love it.That's a load of sentiment!!