If you are intending to assemble in the order as you have laid out, keep in mind the opener layer being on the backscale would render the can opener unable to opener cans.
Grand Prix, definitely. If you were sticking with the corkscrew, olive fork fishscaler for the ultimate gourmand's knife.
Quote from: hiraethus on May 12, 2015, 04:42:04 PMGrand Prix, definitely. If you were sticking with the corkscrew, olive fork fishscaler for the ultimate gourmand's knife.The Grand Prix is what I'm thinking too.
Ah you got your lotz-a-bladez model finished. I can peen the cellidors together fine, but the alox are so delicate I just dont have the patience for it.
I was originally thinking of a three layer, all blades, but I'm pretty happy with this. I'm missing the blunt point, youth blade (aka butter blade) from the "My First Victorinox." But kept the opener layer instead. The three layer Alox Cadet is a nice size.
Since you're experimenting with peening more than I did, here are some thing for you to try.Use a carriage bolt as the backing. Put it in a bench vice as a test. (Image removed from quote.)This way each side of the rivet is getting hit by a domed surface. When I was playing I found it gave pretty nice results with lots of light hits.If you find you'd like to hit the heads more to form them better but don't want the sak any tighter, put a shim stock or razor blade in during assembly. Then peen to your hearts content and pull the shim when done. Its best to cut rectangle with a V notch and push it in so the shim surrounds the pin as much as possible. Also coat it with oil.
Quote from: Syph007 on May 19, 2015, 03:24:33 PMSince you're experimenting with peening more than I did, here are some thing for you to try.Use a carriage bolt as the backing. Put it in a bench vice as a test. (Image removed from quote.)This way each side of the rivet is getting hit by a domed surface. When I was playing I found it gave pretty nice results with lots of light hits.If you find you'd like to hit the heads more to form them better but don't want the sak any tighter, put a shim stock or razor blade in during assembly. Then peen to your hearts content and pull the shim when done. Its best to cut rectangle with a V notch and push it in so the shim surrounds the pin as much as possible. Also coat it with oil. I am having an issue with the blades not being tight. I think it has to do with the middle pin being TOO tight. The back springs are slightly thinner than the blade and tool tangs. Too tight on the middle and it is causing a slight bow in the scales causing only a small surface contact at the end points. I may have to revisit this. This morning, I've already replaced the middle pin by pushing it out with a new pin. This will at least remove pressure on the middle for now. I may employ your shim idea here. I'm thinking of working on the two outer pins first to get better tightness on the blade tangs.
Quote from: kosmo on May 19, 2015, 03:40:39 PMQuote from: Syph007 on May 19, 2015, 03:24:33 PMSince you're experimenting with peening more than I did, here are some thing for you to try.Use a carriage bolt as the backing. Put it in a bench vice as a test. (Image removed from quote.)This way each side of the rivet is getting hit by a domed surface. When I was playing I found it gave pretty nice results with lots of light hits.If you find you'd like to hit the heads more to form them better but don't want the sak any tighter, put a shim stock or razor blade in during assembly. Then peen to your hearts content and pull the shim when done. Its best to cut rectangle with a V notch and push it in so the shim surrounds the pin as much as possible. Also coat it with oil. I am having an issue with the blades not being tight. I think it has to do with the middle pin being TOO tight. The back springs are slightly thinner than the blade and tool tangs. Too tight on the middle and it is causing a slight bow in the scales causing only a small surface contact at the end points. I may have to revisit this. This morning, I've already replaced the middle pin by pushing it out with a new pin. This will at least remove pressure on the middle for now. I may employ your shim idea here. I'm thinking of working on the two outer pins first to get better tightness on the blade tangs.I have the same issues when I assemble cellidor SAKs, if either of the inner pins are too tight it messes things up. I found it best to peen the end ones first and leave the inner ones until Im happy with the fit and action, then finish the inner pins.
Just the position of the nail nicks really. If its an outer layer youd want both nicks facing out, but thats not possible. If its an inner layer, maybe it can fit in such a way both nicks are accessible?