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I have a rare Sea Wolf Knife made by Gus Marsh. Gus was in UDT in the early 1960's. He designed and  made 26 of the original pattern knives in stainless steel for his UDT-13 unit and some SEAL buddies. The original Sea Wolfs were made up of three distinct parts that were welded together at the crossguard and had no markings or name on the hilt at all.


When Gus decided to manufacture them, he had the knives cast in one piece of solid stainless steel. He received the rough cast blanks at his home and finished them to the mirror bright configuration in his garage workshop. He produced only about 200 of these second generation knives between 1980 and 1984. He only sold them at gun shows in CA, AZ, & NV. These knives were made from 440C stainless steel and hardened to the Rockwell C scale of 57-58. He has not made any more since 1984.


He later sold the molds to Mike England ( a known knife industry scammer, unbeknownst to Gus), who never paid Gus what he owed him, England then had them made in Asia and passed them off as originals with his own name as the maker stamped on them.


The REAL knives that Gus made are stamped SEA WOLF KNIFE CO. USA. on the grip area.
The PHONIES are stamped with just WOLF KNIFE CO.


This knife was received directly from Gus's patent attorney. It is in it's original box, with the accompanying instructions and guarantee. It has never been used and is in excellent condition. I don't need the knife, and don't normally collect this type, so I would prefer it to go to a 'good home' or into a suitable collection. Asking about $1800.

If any of you are interested, please let me know, Thanks,

Mike

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Agreed!  I need to look hard for one of these!!

So Mike can you shoot me a message to discuss?
Bryan that is amazing. Curious, what that is called then? CKCC? Are you linked with me on Facebook? Feel free to add me here and chat away if you have anything of the sort for trade/sell

Hi Jaron

if you accept the friend request I sent you earlier (here on IKC), I can message you and we can chat. Thanks!



Bryan W said:

Wow that was a fascinating "write up" that I was unaware of.  Beautiful design!

If your ever interested JJ, here is a unique one from Canada.  Enjoy the photos!


Hello Gus Marsh!  

I'm brand new to this site and with research on the Seawolf I found this forum.  I'm the new proud owner of one of your Seawolf's.  A friend found this at a yardsale way up in northern Maine.  He Know's I'm an avid diver and said "I'll get this for my buddy".   I didn't know anything about it until now.  I guess I'm proud to be one of the 200.   I'll make some nice rubber straps or upgrade my holder. But now that I think about it.  I'd hate to loose it.  



Gus Marsh said:

I made about 26 three piece SeaWolf Diving knives from 1967-1968. These were all made in a machine shop in Subic Bay, Philippines and handed out to all my diving buddies. In 1980 I started making the one piece SeaWolf knife and sold them for four year. The original three piece knife sells for about $1,000, while the one piece sells for around $500.00

Hello!  (great information and thanks for helping me find more information about what I just acquired.)  

I'm brand new to this site and with research on the Seawolf I found this forum.  I'm the new proud owner of one of your Seawolf's.  A friend found this at a yardsale way up in northern Maine.  He Know's I'm an avid diver and said "I'll get this for my buddy". He paid peanuts for it.   I didn't know anything about it until now.  I guess I'm proud to be one of the 200.   I'll make some nice rubber straps or upgrade my holder. But now that I think about it.  I'd hate to loose it.   

Keep an eye on the scabbard and look for any signs of excessive cutting. That will happen if you have a decent edge on the knife or if the scabbard is too large and the knife is allowed to move around a lot. (Voice of experience) 

Thank you Rick. I love to learn from someone elses experience.   I'll tell ya, this looks like the original edge.  looking under magnify lens, I can't find a mistake or scratch from a poor edge.  Not very sharp and thinking I'd leave it like that.  ?  

Great input for me though.. thank you. 

Would you happen to know if Gus Marsh is still on this site?   I wonder if he's keeping track on how many are left out there and who has them.  Just interesting.   I'd PAY for a signed letter of authenticity. for sure!!!  Item not for sale:) I'ts a keeper. 

Only problem with a letter of authenticity is that none of the one piece knives have serial numbers on them or any other marking other than the name that signifies they are from the original lot. I have never seen the three piece knife and don't know if those are serialized or not. As for Gus, not sure what his status is. Mike El posted back in 2014 that he got one of the knives from Gus' patent attorney. Maybe Mike can get a lead on Gus or provide the attorney's info at least.

Another bit of advice on the knife is to not use it as a crowbar. You can actually break them if you pry hard enough as one of my commercial dive buddies did with his many years ago. I doubt lifting an abalone off of a rock will break it; I always use kelp to get them to lift up anyway. I always kept my edge pretty sharp so I could cut through whatever I needed to cut through. Worked well on large synthetic hawser rope.

I think I'll make a display case for mine......

Walter,

Gus is indeed still with us and active here at iKC. I have let him know about the discussion here.  Congrats on finding one of the rare and very much sought after Sea Wolf's

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