Thanks. Unfortunately I haven't had time to start the scales yet. Between school, homework, and soccer I haven't had much free time. Hopefully I can start on them tomorrow since there isn't any school.
JUNK
"Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Grieve, mourn and wail. Change your laughter to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves before the Lord, and he will lift you up."
After hours and hours of sanding and experimenting with different finishes and application techniques (on leftover scraps), I finally managed to come up with the low-gloss, high contrast finish that I have been looking for. I sanded the stabilized redwood handles to 1500 grit, wiped on a thin layer of shellac with a cloth, let it dry, and then lightly sanded with 1500 grit again to cut down on the gloss. Overall I'm pretty happy with how this turned out (my first Mule scales) and am looking forward to dressing my ZDP Mule.
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jabba359 wrote:After hours and hours of sanding and experimenting with different finishes and application techniques (on leftover scraps), I finally managed to come up with the low-gloss, high contrast finish that I have been looking for. I sanded the stabilized redwood handles to 1500 grit, wiped on a thin layer of shellac with a cloth, let it dry, and then lightly sanded with 1500 grit again to cut down on the gloss. Overall I'm pretty happy with how this turned out (my first Mule scales) and am looking forward to dressing my ZDP Mule.
I wrapped it like a Solomon Bar just like the cord propping it up.
First I did a simple wrap. Similar to the way you did the wrap on the second and third mules you posted. The with the blade facing away from you wrap the handle exactly like a solomon bar for the outer layer. You have to have the blade face away from you so the knot area on the sides goes towards the back of the handle and fills your palm.
I did it for 2 reasons. One I have fat hands and it fills my hand very well. Second this is my camping knife and if for some reason I need some paracord in a hurry I can peel of the outer layer and still have a wrapped handle. I didn't gut any of the paracord.
Do you guys make the final shape of your handles before you epoxy them on? If not, how close are you to final shape before you attach them? i am thinking that the closer you can get to final shape before assembly the better. Also the closer you can get to final length on the pins or sleeves the better?
Yes, the closer you can get the better, but cutting it close means you have to be very confident of your tolerances. I think some people give themselves a healthy margin of error even if they have very good hands.
Here's a pic of my S90V Mule in a pair of old jeans. I took step-by-step pictures which I may post in a new thread at some point, but that's mostly as an advertisement for Joel Bolden on britishblades and Quickbeam here, whose tutorials taught me what I needed to know. :)
Actually, on this knife, I cut it too close on one edge and had to sand the S90V down almost a millimeter to match the scales in one spot. Sanding S90V is just as hard as it sounds. :o
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I was thinking of using my router and a template bit with a bearing to make scales. I would mount a thick block of wood to one side of the mule to make a nice fitting blank/pattern to work off of. Cut it out on the bandsaw so it is close, then sand it the rest of the way,to match the handle.
Then I could just use this on the router table with the template bit to cut all my material to shape. I purchased 5 of the current mules to play with. I am and advid wood worker, so I think this knife project is right up my alley!
FLYcrash wrote:Hi Hector,
Yes, the closer you can get the better, but cutting it close means you have to be very confident of your tolerances. I think some people give themselves a healthy margin of error even if they have very good hands.
Here's a pic of my S90V Mule in a pair of old jeans. I took step-by-step pictures which I may post in a new thread at some point, but that's mostly as an advertisement for Joel Bolden on britishblades and Quickbeam here, whose tutorials taught me what I needed to know. :)
Actually, on this knife, I cut it too close on one edge and had to sand the S90V down almost a millimeter to match the scales in one spot. Sanding S90V is just as hard as it sounds. :o