Quote from: JAfromMn on May 01, 2014, 05:14:46 AMI think he have some very killer bees working for him Modder bee's.
I think he have some very killer bees working for him
The scales are made of aluminum. The pattern I do with a Proxxon handset (like dremel) and a ball head milling. Polish and anodize. .... Finished ?? .
Introducing the Praetorian SAK (Not sure if get to give it a name, but I'm going to anyway!)I loved my factory SAK Tinker so much but always felt the can opener (although I did use it on the odd occasion) and the small knife (barely used!) were redundant items for me. The eyelet in the reamer was also something I've never had need for (plus an awl is better for paracord work with the rounded edge) and felt restricted by the central philips, especially as it sees tons of use. Enter my dream SAK – The Praetorian. Lose the spare knife, lose the can opener, side mounted awl, side mounted philips, one decent blade and some awesome looking black Alox scales and a smooth pocket clip.Steve was brilliant to work with and the finish on everything is just incredible. Great attention to detail. This is going to get regular use for the rest of my life I imagine. And one day passed onto my son. Thank you tattoosteve99!!
Thank you! I'm glad if you like it. The scales are made of aluminum. The pattern I do with a Proxxon handset (like dremel) and a ball head milling. Polish and anodize. Finished.Quote from: captain spaulding on May 01, 2014, 05:19:21 AMQuote from: JAfromMn on May 01, 2014, 05:14:46 AMI think he have some very killer bees working for him Modder bee's.Milling modder bee`s
Quote from: nwagstaff on May 02, 2014, 03:17:30 PMIntroducing the Praetorian SAK (Not sure if get to give it a name, but I'm going to anyway!)I loved my factory SAK Tinker so much but always felt the can opener (although I did use it on the odd occasion) and the small knife (barely used!) were redundant items for me. The eyelet in the reamer was also something I've never had need for (plus an awl is better for paracord work with the rounded edge) and felt restricted by the central philips, especially as it sees tons of use. Enter my dream SAK – The Praetorian. Lose the spare knife, lose the can opener, side mounted awl, side mounted philips, one decent blade and some awesome looking black Alox scales and a smooth pocket clip.Steve was brilliant to work with and the finish on everything is just incredible. Great attention to detail. This is going to get regular use for the rest of my life I imagine. And one day passed onto my son. Thank you tattoosteve99!!Steve did a great job on those rivets, I like the look of them.
initial build of the MidiChamp
I just worked out what the donor knives for this build cost...Not including postage there is about Aus $75 invested in it. Okay I have a few leftover parts but all the good stuff had gone into the MidiChamp.
...This knife will be my second EDC in rotation with my 84mm ebony golfer with LNF. Can't decide which I like most.
This has been on my pipeline for such a long time. Now it's ready:A 84mm Climber with Long Nail File and the old style awl.(Image removed from quote.)(Image removed from quote.)(Image removed from quote.)(Image removed from quote.)Yes, it got custom scales.Plus scales, indeed. This is a thread for show off, so it doesn't even miss a pin or pen. ;-)Did I mention, those are buffalo horn scales, and I attached them without glue this time? ;-)The bail was a four layer bail. Some bending, some tapping and polishing.This knife will be my second EDC in rotation with my 84mm ebony golfer with LNF. Can't decide which I like most.
Now that looks like a very useful tool combo. I'd prefer it with smooth backsprings though without the backlayered tools and the Pioneer inline awl instead of the combo tool. Can't remember ever using the back layered chisel or technician screwdriver and the in line awl is a 1000x better (not even an exaggeration ) than the backlayered one.