Hi, I've been making a knife as some of you know (thanks for the valuable advice.)
The brass for the pins hadn't arrived and I was impatient. I used some drill bits to hold the knife together whilst I shaped the wooden scales. I did leave them slightly oversized to allow for final shaping once everything was glued though.
Today the brass arrived, so I applied the epoxy glue to all the parts and assembled them. Unfortunately when I was tapping the pins through the handle they ripped some of the wood open on the other side like this:
Fortunately it's not to bad, it just means that I will have to rub down the handle a lot thinner than I had intended.
This is the importance of patience I guess.
Putting the brass pins through with bigger chunks of wood (like this - below) would have saved this problem:
The knife should be finished tomorrow. It's currently in my airing cupboard letting the glue cure. I'll post finished pictures when I can. I'm still undecided between bees wax or linseed oil (it's Oak.) Any recommendations?
The brass for the pins hadn't arrived and I was impatient. I used some drill bits to hold the knife together whilst I shaped the wooden scales. I did leave them slightly oversized to allow for final shaping once everything was glued though.
Today the brass arrived, so I applied the epoxy glue to all the parts and assembled them. Unfortunately when I was tapping the pins through the handle they ripped some of the wood open on the other side like this:


Fortunately it's not to bad, it just means that I will have to rub down the handle a lot thinner than I had intended.
This is the importance of patience I guess.
Putting the brass pins through with bigger chunks of wood (like this - below) would have saved this problem:

The knife should be finished tomorrow. It's currently in my airing cupboard letting the glue cure. I'll post finished pictures when I can. I'm still undecided between bees wax or linseed oil (it's Oak.) Any recommendations?