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The Newbies Arena Are you new to knife making? Here is all the help you will need. |
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#1
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Hello. Newbie here. Question regarding Case 1836 Bowie
Hey all,
New to the forum. I recently was given Mt dad's old Case bowie that saw a couple tours in Vietnam and years of abuse after. It's a case 1836. I'm looking at putting on a new handle and cleaning it up "good as new". Can anyone tell me what the original handle was made of? Any suggestions on what material to use as a replacement? I contacted Case directly and they said they have no information on a knife this old. Thanks Dennis |
#2
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I don't think I'd worry about what the original handle was made of. Instead of making it 'good as new' why not make it better? The old case bowies I've seen had some kind of synthetic handles. If that's what you want for yours then use Micarta. If the handle is wood - or if you'd like it to be wood now - then pick some nice stabilized wood from any knife supply house. Stabilized wood is easy to finish and your family will never have to worry about replacing that handle again, ever....
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#3
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I agree with Ray. I've fixed up several old knives and they look the best when you just use the best materials and don't worry about what it used to be.
Once you have to replace parts, it loses any "antique" value anyway. So preserve the sentimental part - it was good then and is now updated to great! __________________ God bless Texas! Now let's secede!! |
#4
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Thanks for the responses guys. Historical accuracy isn't much of a concern. Being a noob, doing it correctly is my biggest concern. Lots of video watching and reading have been done already. Wishing I had more/proper tools at my disposal. I'm a bit nervous trying to drill through scales without a drill press and getting proper alignment. Guess I'll just have to order a few since its not the only knife I plan on ever doing/making.
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#5
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I love to fix up old knives. Have done a few in th past few years. Be careful taking the old scales off and measure everything. I am disappointed in Case. Try a different office. Call them, do not count on email. I've been through this before, the flunky who answers email may be sitting in the Philippines.
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#6
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IF you make it good as NEW then why not just go buy a NEW knife or better yet start leaning how to make a NEW knife from scatch. That knife has history and character that once removed can never be put back so IF you do change things make sure that's exactly what you want. Personally I would just sharepen it maybe make a new sheath. If the handle are really bad then yes you could replace them with that sorta knife I would go with wood or the same type of material as the original (not sure what it is without the company's knowledge or at least pics). one thing I would not do is clean up the blade and make it new and shiny if it has patina and wear marks and stuff in it...IT SHOULD the knife went through a war and much use after I would think that war and use would have left its mark and as long as its not causing a functional problem I would leave all that. Just remember a new clean and shiny knife can always be made but getting that patina and every mark that comes with it takes years and years to produce
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#7
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I have refurbished a few old knives that needed repair. I recently did. Japanese Nata. The thread is recent with pictures. If you look at it, you'll see that you can find a happy medium. Clean up the blade without removing it's character. Leave some of the pits and dings. A new handle and fittings, perhaps a sheath. Let it keep it's history, but make it interesting and usable.
__________________ Andy Garrett https://www.facebook.com/GarrettKnives?ref=hl Charter Member - Kansas Custom Knifemaker's Association www.kansasknives.org "Drawing your knife from its sheath and using it in the presence of others should be an event complete with oos, ahhs, and questions." |
#8
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It is a phenolic plastic. I have one those that I purchased new in 1967. Good knives, if you have need of a large knife. How worn is the grip? I would do as little as possible to the knife. Just a clean up maybe. The original models like these were used by Carlson's Raiders, USMC, in the pacific, WW-2. They were made by Collins, Kinfolk, Western, and Case. They are commonly called the V-44, but are actually the Collins #18 machete. Original grips were horn and later, phenolic plastic.
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#9
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Thanks for the quick responses. I added pictures to my original post. Apparently they aren't working or aren't fine correctly. The original handle was broken/ worn out/ destroyed. Nothing but a bowie with a brass guard with a hidden tang.
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#10
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#11
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I tried adding pictures again, but got a message saying my post needed Admin approval. Apparently I need to have more posts to make sure I'm not a bot.
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#12
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Your pictures are there. I don't see anything in the pictures that would change any of the advice you have received so far ....
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Tags |
antique, bowie, case, cleaning, easy, finish, fixed, fixed blade, handle, handles, knife, knife supply, knives, made, make, making, material, materials, micarta, newbie, old knives, press, supply, vietnam, wood |
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