Cor, doesn't it just! One of the nicest woods I think I've seen, and having had Jeannius61 as a wood mentor on BB means I've seen a good few.It scrubs up well.
Cor, doesn't it just! One of the nicest woods I think I've seen, and having had Jeannius61 as a wood mentor on BB means I've seen a good few.It scrubs up well.
Looking good! It’s always nice to watch stuff progressingThat's a great memory, my friend.Looking good! It’s always nice to watch stuff progressing
Looks like two sets of bolts glued with cyanoacrylate and one set with epoxy. Is that right? If so, what is your decision maker for using one vs the other? Same glue under the scales too?
Also, I could have sworn it was you who once upon a time demonstrated using brown parcel tape and a scalpel to precisely mask the ricasso in front of scales. I have used it since and thought it a good method. Is my memory playing a trick?
Yup, the residue is a PITA, I persevered for years with the meths to remove it.You used to use parcel tape? I did initially, but got real annoyed at it leaving patches of itself over the blade. Masking tape tape for me, with bisley gun grease on the blade prior to tape application...(no specific reason for bisley, i just had a big tub of it, you dont need much) Run a sharp blade down the spine, all comes off easily, but yeah.... parcel tape can f..k right off.
I'm actually making my first ever knife with removable scales as we speak... bit different. No pins... No corby or loveless bolts... never done one before... never been asked in all fairness. 16 years and no ones ever asked for removable scales, cant get my head around that one little thing... Seems kinda weird.

I might use epoxy now and again, not very often at all, though. I find the CA much stronger, by a long way. I use two different viscosities, too, thin and medium. I find that thinner stronger than the medium, but there isn't much in it, but you have to be fast with the thin, as it goes off like mad.@Stuart Mitchell Knives Are you using only the cyanoacrylate for scales and bolts? Does it offer a strong enough bond? Could you explain the advantages and disadvantages of using it vs epoxy in this context please? I’ve only ever used it in woodworking where I want a temporary or low strength/fast setting adhesion.
Done a little more on mine today, sounds like we have gone about the process in a very similar way.I did a couple of removable scale knives a few years ago. Used 3mm dowel pins for initial alignment. Drilled and reamed through holes in handle and blade. Needed to lap holes back to size after heat treatment as I didn’t have a carbide reamer the right size.
Handles held by two pairs of stainless screws from https://www.accu.co.uk/brand/1-accuscrews
Tried various head styles. M4 Torx countersunk flat was best but countersunk domed were interesting too. Screws fitted into brass threaded tubes that were a snug fit in reamed holes. Had to make the threaded tubes myself. Not an easy thing to find.
Lanyard hole had no tube liner.
This knife.@Stuart Mitchell Knives Are you using only the cyanoacrylate for scales and bolts? Does it offer a strong enough bond? Could you explain the advantages and disadvantages of using it vs epoxy in this context please? I’ve only ever used it in woodworking where I want a temporary or low strength/fast setting adhesion.









I'm just using some bolts i got from Amazon.
CA bonds can come apart... but they need to be frozen. Overnight in the freezer and just flex them. They pop quite easily. Assuming a vice and either molegrips, or 3 bits of round bar positioned along the vice jaws ( 2 on the outer sides of one jaw, one, centrally on the other). I always use CA to secure the threads of frying pans for example (they all get loose eventually if attached by screws) CA withstands heat very well as i'm sure you know.The blue and red knife you see up there, like an idiot, when I bonded the scales to the liners (with the thin CA), I created two RH scales. I know that they would not come apart, no chance, no way. I suspect the G10 might delaminate first. With epoxy, I would have got them apart.
I have actually saved them, took a little thinking outside the box though
I'll get a photo later.
Well spotted.I'm just using some bolts i got from Amazon.
I quite like that profile. Is it just the pic or are the holes in the blade larger than the ones in the scales? The lanyard hole in the blade seems to be the same as the scale holes? Maybe just how it comes across on my screen...

I use ca for liners. Good bond, FAR quicker than Epoxy. Not even close.Thanks for the info! I thought about using ca glue when glueing up the liners on one of mine but didn’t think it would provide enough strength. I’ll give it a try next time I think.
I use ca for liners. Good bond, FAR quicker than Epoxy. Not even close.
Untitled by Mark Hill, on Flickr
by Mark Hill, on Flickr
by Mark Hill, on Flickr