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Hi all,
This has been a great discussion. I'm also new to the world of Case and some of these comments have been a real eye opener. As a consigner, I'm obligated to my seller. It's difficult to know the best way to handle some of these less than perfect knives that he has. I know that most people like nice and shiny but at the same time, I don't want to hurt the integrity of the knife.
Concerning disclosure, it's only right and proper to acknowledge a knife's history. I don't hesitate to tell someone that a knife has been polished, cleaned, restored... Most people are pretty forgiving of a knife's unsavory history as long as they know about it upfront.
One of the more difficult issues for me is the term "mint". I have Parker & Henley's Pocket Knife Trader's definition of "Mint" and "Near Mint". Until recently, most the knives I've listed have only had blade rub or tang scratches. There's not tarnish, spots, or wear. But I still hesitate to use the term mint. Any thoughts?
Kim
Well, this has been a touchy subject for MANY years. Back in the "old days" any vintage rare/valuable knife that was polished was considered a crime. If a knife was "restored" it was taken for granted that the seller would tell the buyer, and if he didn't, he was considered a undesirable knife person.
NKCA Grades;
NKCA MINT
Absolutely new, exactly as shipped from the factory. No blemishes. Never carried sharpened or used. A mint knife may be oiled and wiped with a soft rag. Any other cleaning will result in a 1/3 to 1/2 reduction in value
NKCA NEAR MINT
An unused knife with a few minor blemishes. It may show slight carry wear or age checking on the handles. The blades may have been lightly honed or may show slight discoloration
NKCA EXCELLENT
Up to 10% blade wear. All blades walk and talk and operate smooth. Blades may be discolored or cleaned. Sophisticated collectors prefer discoloration to heavy cleaning. A heavily cleaned or buffed knife cannot grade higher than NKCA Excellent.
NKCA VERY GOOD OR GOOD
Up to 25% blade wear. May have one lazy blade. All stampings clear. No replaced parts.
NKCA FAIR
Up to 50% blade wear. Blades may be lazy. Large cracks or chips in the handles. Handles or blades may have been replaced with original parts. Stampings faint but legible.
NKCA POOR
Blades heavily worn.Handles broken or missing. Obviously replaced blades. Stampings faint or illegible.
I wish I had found this a couple of days ago.I think that from now on the knives I sell (mostly to buddy's at work) will be in as found condition. The ones I want to keep I'll decide on a as needed bases.
Thanks all this has been a great help.
you guys outta see the Puma I'm about to post pictures of....I don't think it even rates on this scale! LOL
Poor guy.
Be careful out there guys!
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