What did you use to polish the scales? I've been curious about how to restore the shine on celador.
I think aluminum is better for corrosion resistance, but the brass liners LOOK really fantastic.
Love it! I prefer the deluxe tinker myself but pretty much deluxe of any model is weapon of choice. Beautiful work, the brass and red are so classic!
Maybe I'm wrong on this situation, but I thought that brass was superior from a corrosion perspective. After all, SAKs had brass liners for most of their history and I thought that the switch to aluminum liners was made strictly as a cost-saving measure. At the very least, the use of brass liners removes one dissimilar metal from the galvanic corrosion equation (steel blades/tools, aluminum liners, brass pins). Perhaps someone with a strong metals/chemistry background can weigh in on this issue.
Quote from: Lynn LeFey on January 26, 2013, 04:50:24 PMI think aluminum is better for corrosion resistance, but the brass liners LOOK really fantastic. Maybe I'm wrong on this situation, but I thought that brass was superior from a corrosion perspective. After all, SAKs had brass liners for most of their history and I thought that the switch to aluminum liners was made strictly as a cost-saving measure. At the very least, the use of brass liners removes one dissimilar metal from the galvanic corrosion equation (steel blades/tools, aluminum liners, brass pins). Perhaps someone with a strong metals/chemistry background can weigh in on this issue.
Great job btw! One of these days I need to replace the aluminum liners in my EDC cybertool 34 with brass.
Beautiful work!I've experience aluminum corrosion before, building bike wheels with aluminum spoke nipples. They represent a significant weight savings; 2g ea. vs 6g ea. for brass ones. Over the course of an entire 32 spoke wheel, that's a significant 128g you save. But, if you don't put some kind of treatment on the threads of the spokes first, the AL nips eventually will gall and seize up on the stainless spokes. Ti against stainless has the same problem. There's something electrochemical that goes on with stainless and other metals that causes it, but I don't know what it is.
The pliers and CT liners are thicker than most. I think the CT would rub or hit the other tools unless it was 1mm thick.
The top 3 are 84s. Do you have the bottom 3? I will have to open a CT this weekend. I don't have any Lite liners loose.(Image removed from quote.)
Number 4 is from one of these.(Image removed from quote.)
How many of the 91mm tools actually require those goofy shaped liners though? I mean I have put almost all of the top tools from a 91 on a 93 with one liner shape. I know the cybertool plastic part needs the liners to rest on (well i think it does), but I think thats the only really special one. So.. shouldn't a front/back scale liner and one style of inner liner be sufficient for building a 91mm SAK with brass liners?
To be mailed soon. Am I correct in assuming you need all of these?(Image removed from quote.)