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I was hired to repair, well that might not be the right word.. lets say build a Camillus US Military Pilots Survival Knife. My customer Allen gave me a Camillus blade and guard and asked me to put it together, It will be a gift for a friend of his.

This company went out of business in 2007 so I did some research and was able to find the drawings for the parts I need to make, the pommel and Case.

This is what he gave me, I took a picture of it on top of one of the drawings I found online:

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Beating the leather sections together as I go along with hammer and punch. So far so good.

After shaping on the belt grinder, I decided not to put the groves in the leather, I think it will look better smooth.

Coat of dye, and let sit for a day.

Those red spacers are a real nice touch, Dan! I have a feeling that the end result will surpass spectacular. Good show, my friend!

Looking great!

What brand of meter, Dan.

I've a Fluke 77.. no thermocouple attachment though .. never had the need .. they were still pretty pricey last time I checked .. i.e. yrs ago & the Fluke name. 
!?! You're obviously happy with the increased accuracy !?! 
??? did you take a similar approach to monitoring the temp of the forge ???

Also, nice forge .. it it wasn't a sin, I'd be envious :)

Daniel Howland said:

Got my digital thermometer and thermocouple in, made a holder for the TC and I must say the results are much better this time knowing the right temperature of the salt.

Sweet mount @ thermocouple 

let me guess .. engineering plastic w/ low melting temp .. hehe

The project's turning out pretty sweet there, Dan !!!

Daniel Howland said:

Coat of dye, and let sit for a day.

... and I second the "thumbs up" on the red spacer washers !!

Thanks Dale,

This is my first experience with a digital thermometer and have not yet used it on anything else.

I purchased the Digital Thermometer on Amazon here I does look like a Fluke style case and the Flukes are still pretty pricey, mine is not a Fluke and was only $16.25 it comes with 2 thermocouples but the temp range is too low for my needs so I bought 2 seperate ones from a guy on e-bay the first one temp range -58 to 1292 °F (-50 to 700 °C) which is the one I used on the salts, the second one reads temp Up to 2372 °F (1300 °C) I plan on using in another forge I have not built yet, my hopes are to heat treat with a gas forge.

Thanks Dale, Ron and Craig.

It soaked up 3 coats of linseed oil, I'm thinking in a few days putting on a coat if KIWI shoe polish, maybe...

Next step leather sheath.

Wow, that looks great! 

Aluminium thermocouple mount, screws on the side of the pot. It's nice having machines to fabricate parts/tools. :) 

D ale said:

What brand of meter, Dan.

I've a Fluke 77.. no thermocouple attachment though .. never had the need .. they were still pretty pricey last time I checked .. i.e. yrs ago & the Fluke name. 
!?! You're obviously happy with the increased accuracy !?! 
??? did you take a similar approach to monitoring the temp of the forge ???

Also, nice forge .. it it wasn't a sin, I'd be envious :)

Daniel Howland said:

Got my digital thermometer and thermocouple in, made a holder for the TC and I must say the results are much better this time knowing the right temperature of the salt.

Sweet mount @ thermocouple 

let me guess .. engineering plastic w/ low melting temp .. hehe

Looks great, Daniel. Looks like a cross between a camillus snd a k-bar with the smooth handle.

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