Eclipse, made in England

  • Come along to the amazing Summer Moot (21st July - 2nd August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.

BeerHunter

Tenderfoot
Jul 12, 2012
78
0
England
Anyone know of this make? I bought a knife at a boot sale at the weekend.

The handle was a mess (the end of it was broken off). Underneath where the scales would go, it had the name stamped.

I paid the outrageous sum of £1, so doesn;t really matter if it's junk, but was wondering if anyone know of them?

Thanks
 
Eclipse were famous for engineering tools such as hacksaw blades, magnets and scribers etc
 
Old Sheffield tool and knife maker, made all sorts of stuff like hacksaws, putty knives, shoe knives and loads more; when I was learning the tools they were a respected maker for work-a-day tools that'd last and were plenty good enough for tradesmen. If it's old-ish it'll be decent steel and worth fettling. I don't know if they're still trading but it'd only be a badged item now I suspect. :-)
 
That doesn't mean it's no good, could easily be new old stock, eh? I'd fettle it and see what it's like if it was mine :-)
 
Maybe. I'm gluing some scales on it at the moment. Goodness knows what I'll use it for, it's enormous.

Perhaps I shall start baking giant loaves of bread. Or hunting dinosaurs.
 


Glued some scales on, just need to oil them now.

Any ideas what this was originally intended for? Butchers? The blade is over a foot long (!), and the guard/ferrule is pretty hefty.

Cheers
 
Any ideas what this was originally intended for? Butchers? The blade is over a foot long (!), and the guard/ferrule is pretty hefty.

In a word, no. I've seen blades of similar size and shape used in the rag trade to cut rolls of fabric, but the guard on yours would get in the way for that sort of use.

Does the blade look like it was originally made as a knife? I'm wondering if someone has turned what was originally a saw blade into a knife. I wouldn't have expected any manufacturer to stamp his/its name under the scales.
 
Interesting idea. Tho I'll say if someone's "re-purposed" another tool, they've done an incredibly neat job of it.

There's some flex in the blade, but not as much as a saw. Agree the stamping of the name is in a very curious place.

Thanks all, was just mildly curious. Perhaps I'll buy a kebab machine, and use it to carve the elephant leg.
 

BCUK Shop

We have a a number of knives, T-Shirts and other items for sale.

SHOP HERE