Thanks for the pics yab, I can't wait to get mine tomorrow.
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Very glad to see Spyderco removed the oil and put such small notches on the blades.
Any experience out there that would tell us if we should use these as is and wait a while to make sure the cracks are stable before filling?
And what are the options to fill the cracks? With the right complimentary color some of the filled cracks could look like attractive natural features of the spalted maple. Might get out the dremel and shape some of the cracks before filling.
Hope I get mine tomorrow.
Our reason is quite satisfied, in 999 cases out of every 1000 of us, if we can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case our credulity is criticized by someone else. Our faith is faith in someone else's faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case.
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Thanks Yab, so is now the time to ask how you are going to repair it? I have no idea how to do this other than use wood putty - and I dont think that is the way to go here.
PS: Even though the knives are useable, I cannot imagine how sad then pissed off Sal and crew must have been when crack after crack started showing up - especially on such beautiful wood.
___________________________________________ 2011: G10 Dragonfly ^ Breeden Rescue ^ Bug ^ Honeybee ^ Centofante 3 ^ Woodcraft Mule ^SFO Visit Buys = Frn Stretch & Native 4 CF!! ^ Salt 1 ^ Burgundy Calypso ZDP-189 ^ Walker Blue Almite ^ Native 5 ^ Squeak ^ Chaparral ^ Urban Olive Green ^ STREET BEAT!!...
2012: Caly Jr (vintage/NIB!), SS Navigator-fave LBK of all time, Jester, Orange Dodo, CS Orange PM2,Techno, Bradley! AIR!!
Sequimite wrote:Very glad to see Spyderco removed the oil and put such small notches on the blades.
Any experience out there that would tell us if we should use these as is and wait a while to make sure the cracks are stable before filling?
And what are the options to fill the cracks? With the right complimentary color some of the filled cracks could look like attractive natural features of the spalted maple. Might get out the dremel and shape some of the cracks before filling.
Hope I get mine tomorrow.
I found a big thread on this with links to other threads at British Blades. Short version: use the thinnest version of CA glue that you can find. Warm the wood gently with a hair dryer before applying. Apply, let cure, sand. Repeat.
JNewell wrote:I found a big thread on this with links to other threads at British Blades. Short version: use the thinnest version of CA glue that you can find. Warm the wood gently with a hair dryer before applying. Apply, let cure, sand. Repeat.
Thanks. Will try to find that thread. Question: CA glue??
___________________________________________ 2011: G10 Dragonfly ^ Breeden Rescue ^ Bug ^ Honeybee ^ Centofante 3 ^ Woodcraft Mule ^SFO Visit Buys = Frn Stretch & Native 4 CF!! ^ Salt 1 ^ Burgundy Calypso ZDP-189 ^ Walker Blue Almite ^ Native 5 ^ Squeak ^ Chaparral ^ Urban Olive Green ^ STREET BEAT!!...
2012: Caly Jr (vintage/NIB!), SS Navigator-fave LBK of all time, Jester, Orange Dodo, CS Orange PM2,Techno, Bradley! AIR!!
JNewell wrote:I found a big thread on this with links to other threads at British Blades. Short version: use the thinnest version of CA glue that you can find. Warm the wood gently with a hair dryer before applying. Apply, let cure, sand. Repeat.
Could you post a link or tell what subforum of British Blades it's on. Can't find the thread on the Bushcraft subforum.
Our reason is quite satisfied, in 999 cases out of every 1000 of us, if we can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case our credulity is criticized by someone else. Our faith is faith in someone else's faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case.
- William James, from The Will to Believe, a guest lecture at Yale University in 1897
I'm not sure yet how I'm going to go about it, but I'm thinking about a syringe and slow setting clear epoxy. Mix it up, draw it into a syringe, put the needle on and inject it into the cracks. I don't know if it will work, but it is worth a try.
I don't believe in safe queens, only in pre-need replacements.
Basically they are advocating thin superglue or epoxy.
Our reason is quite satisfied, in 999 cases out of every 1000 of us, if we can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case our credulity is criticized by someone else. Our faith is faith in someone else's faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case.
- William James, from The Will to Believe, a guest lecture at Yale University in 1897
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Before you do anything to the bushcraft knife handle, Please let it aclimate to your climate for 72- up to 96 hours. Then I would use thin CA / superglue to fill the cracks. Depending on where this wood came from in the world, it may actually aclimate well to your environment. My 1st Bushcraft had shrank a bit in the package, but now it is perfect. The wood expanded back to its natural state, and it is flush with the tang and no cracks. Wood is a living breathing material, until properly seasoned and sealed. Most of these spalted woods like the the bushcraft handle are cured for 3-4 years in blocks, before they are ever cut open.
One more thing. If you are sanding this wood on the handles, it is SPALTED. Those pretty black lines are mold spores that fed on the sap in the wood. They are not dead, they are dormid. If you go to sanding on the wood you better be wearing a resperator. Have you heard of black mold??? that is what it is, and if you breath it in, the moisture in your lungs and nasal cavity will reactivate the spores and give you a great upper respritory infection. Ask me how I know!
That looks right, but if you read into the (lonnnnnnng) thread, there are some links to other threads. Epoxy is too thick to get into the cracks to give you good filling. That's why they're advocating the thinnest CA possible, and multiple applications.
Except for a very, very slight amount of shrinkage around the tang, the handle on my CC Bushcraft is great. I am anxiously awaiting the second that was shipped today.
Epoxy can be thinned with denatured alcohol. It can be thinned to any consistency. The problem with it is that it does not have the wicking properties of thin CA.
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yablanowitz wrote:True enough, but I've never had much luck with or faith in CA glues. I've had much, much better results with epoxies over the years.
I'm going with the epoxy so I can color it. I should be able to mix one or more colors with oil paints to combine with the thinned epoxy.
Our reason is quite satisfied, in 999 cases out of every 1000 of us, if we can find a few arguments that will do to recite in case our credulity is criticized by someone else. Our faith is faith in someone else's faith, and in the greatest matters this is most the case.
- William James, from The Will to Believe, a guest lecture at Yale University in 1897