Dumb question... Anyone out there have a couple rabbit pelts (properly cleaned and tanned, ready to use) that they'd like to part with for a cheap price?
Won't do you any good now, but I used to have several that I bought at a gun show. I don't know why I bought them, but I wish I still had them.....for what reason I don't know.
Well I just won an auction for a rabbit pelt. $4.25 plus $5 for shipping. We'll see how it is. At $9.25 I'm thinking it'll do for the time being. Thanks for the other options. I've also seen the listings at Amazon and I still need to see if the nearby Hobby Lobby in Indiana carries them. I know it depends on the store and local attitudes some times.
Just arrived from eBay. Winning bid: $3. Shipping: $4. Actual postage: $2.41 After paypal and ebay fees the seller probably made $2 on the deal. Anyway. I was bored and it looked interesting. A little boyscout multi-tool. Wrench/wirecutters plus three blades, Fine edge, serrated edge and screwdriver/file. Cutting edge are 1 3/4 inches on the blades. Overall length is 4 /14 inches. I'll need to do a little cleaning and get some coon-p on it but it seems to work well all blades have a good snap. Spring on pliers is strong. Made in China.
Great find. Have you ever seen this particular knife before? A saw like this would pretty good in any hunting outfit, even useful for the little deer I shoot .
Wish i could find more about it., Reminds me of the Marbles Fisherman Tool. Maxam also make something similar. The Marbles and Maxam both have more functions but this one has a larger set of pliers. I'm thiking about getting the Maxam. I already have the Marbles. Looks and works pretty good, especially for $7. (The Marbles was also $7)
I have one similar to the BSA model below, received as a gift a few years back. It looks like it has the same pliers and basic blades/files but it also has a 1/4" square "blade" to use as a drive for the small sockets that came with it in it's nylon pouch.
I have been inspired to give myself one of these Marbles tools and looking for Queen stockman with engraved bolsters. I could get choked up about how much I appreciate myself, .
Looks like Frank Buster pulled out all the stops on that one, Jan! Those ultra long pulls on the two pen blades are certainly unusual. But then again so are the exaggerated drop points. I like the mini Wharncliffe opposite of the Sheepsfoot master blade! Lots of blade choices.
Oh, six or seven......who's counting. Hey, give me a break, I'm an old guy. With one good eye. But I'm getting cataract surgery on the bad eye tomorrow! Then I'll see the other blade.
And the R-4 makes three! I'm pretty sure according to the Rules of Knife Collecting as laid down by Holy & Most Ancient Guild of Cutlery it is clearly stated that once a person owns three knives of the same brand they must announce that an unofficial accumulation of brands has taken place. Upon reaching five of the same Brand, he/she must announce an affinity for the brand and upon reach ten or more they become a novice collector of the brand. I'm publicly announcing that I have reached step one, an unofficial accumulation of Remington knives produced by Camillus.
Top Right, the Remington R-4 Sportsman Series Utility Knife with Water fowl Serrated blade (Saw blade) Delrin handles. NOS with box and Papers
Middle Left, Remington R3843 six blade Trailhand Bullet Knife. Also with Delrin handles, NOS with box and papers.
Bottom right, Remington R-12 Field & Steam Trapper, laminated wood handles. Unused & unsharpened. Light shelf wear, like new, no box, no papers (It was my first Remington, my first Trapper and it was given to me!) It is no longer lonely.
I have a feeling you actually have an affinity for the brand. The mailman is just slow. I agree with Ron, the Trailhand is so different than the rest that I am drawn to it
Another knife form Mike's Box (See a Real box of knives) This is a copy of the German Fallschirmjäger (Paratrooper's) Gravity knife. The knives were issued to German Paratroops in WWII. This is actually a Koren copy of the German made LL80, which was made illegal and banned from export. The blade is not spring loaded. You point the knife blade down, push the lever forward and the dlade slides out. Point the blade to the sky, push the lever forward the blade drops back in. quite a bit of blade play but the lock feels pretty positive. Nice long spike on the end for untying knots and poking holes in PE so you can stick in a detonator. As I'll never own the real deal, This Koren copy will have to do. I plan on repainting the handle.
Toby I have asked a couple Paratroopers from the 82nd and the 101st, a smoke jumper or three and a hand full of sport parachutist, But I never got answers when I ask if they use those little folders to cut away a failure to deploy. They just give me that look.
Hi Kirk, about cutting the risers on your parachute when it is fouled. I suppose it would be one way to pass the time until you reached the automatic stop! Having jumped a few times, I think I'd pop the reserve and pray it didn't get tangled in the malfunctioning main.
I jumped with T-10s and the -1 (dash one) parachutes. I can't recall if they had quick releases for a fouled canopy or not. I know the T-10 had a big "Press Here Button" that all the straps fed into. When you landed you would remove your reserve, pull the safety on the button and slap it. The whole 'chute harness would come loose. The Dash one also had quick release levers (three i believe) but again, you lost the whole 'chute including your reserve.
I think the switch blade was there so you cut yourself out of fouled harness when you were stuck in a tree or was being dragged by the wind and the quick releases failed. I don't think it was for cutting away the 'chute when you were still in the air.
Any special tool is subject matter for jokes like the ignorant like me. I was a pilot in the 82nd and every month or so we would have a few jump missions and be asked to bring newspapers and tape pad the pointy places in our doors. The first time I was positive they were joking, even as while still taping. My stoke almost me forget the name of static line. From the low altitude and how fast they drop , and how hard they hit it seemed no malfunction could ever be salvaged. I am still have that recollection from 40 years ago . The troopers had confidence in their skills and equipment , it had to take real guts, but without that confidence would have said they were not scared spitless, I would only assume they were too crazy to possess a survival instinct. I saw only Ka-Bars and the like personalized taped rigs.
Here I am in 1964 shortly after I arrived at Ft. Campbell, KY. Home of the 101st Airborne Division ~ The Screaming Eagles! I was 17 years old at the time and was early on in my 3 year enlistment. I made a total of 35 static line jumps. All with T10 parachutes.
I always jumped with my Puma Whitehunter strapped to my right leg, on the outside of my calf for accessibility. Toby pretty much nailed it with his comment, but I'll add a little bit more.
In the event that your primary chute malfunctioned you would immediately deploy your reserve parachute. Once you pulled the handle, or ripcord, you would feed the pilot chute out and away from your main chute to avoid a potential entanglement. Bear in mind that most conventional static line parachute jumps from fixed wing aircraft are done at relatively low altitudes. I jumped as low as 900 feet, but more commonly around 1250 to 1350 feet. I made helicopter jumps from higher altitudes -- as high as 1800 feet. HALO (High Altitude Low Opening) jumps are free falls and not made utilizing a static line. A static line is the length of nylon line that is attached to the deployment bag on the parachute and hooked to an anchor-line cable that runs the length of the fuselage inside of the aircraft the troopers are jumping from. Once the aircraft has been exited it is the static line that literally pulls the canopy from the jumper's parachute backpack. If the main chute does not open properly the jumper then has mere seconds to deploy their reserve chute.
So, you see, cutting the risers would not be the most expeditious thing to do. And as Toby mentioned there is a quick release that allows the jumper to slip out of the entire harness.
If the main chute and the reserve chute both failed to open properly we were instructed to bend all the way forward, lock our hands behind our knees, then stick our heads between our legs and kiss our ass good-bye! Sigh-O-Nara!
Bottom-line: I jumped with a knife strapped to my leg for much the same reason as I carry a knife on my person today in civilian life. It was just another tool that I might never need. But I always had it close at hand just in case I did. You know the old saying: "Better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it."
Congrats to you Ron. I was just a five jump johnny. I was assigned to a mech Infantry unit in Germany (then west Germany) Had the joys of jumping from the C123 (not C130) and the C141. The rig in the photo is the T-10 Parachute harness. It does appear that you can pull on the two metal releases to free the entire canopy. However you, you're not to do that unless 1) Your reserve chute fails to deploy and 2) the main chute failed completely.
Ron, I can only imagine how jumping in starched fatigues had to feel!
Ah, yes! The "joy" of blasting a 123 with it's shorter fuselage and intensified prop blast. That was like jumping into the barrel of a cannon! And that's what I made my first 5 Jump School blasts out of at Ft. Benning, GA. I only made one jump from the huge C141 Starlifter, a jet aircraft. Most of my jumps were from 130's. Although I did made several jumps from the ancient C119 Flying Boxcar that on paper, much like the bumble bee, should not have been able to get off the ground. We also jumped from C124's which were double decked inside. Coming down the stairs and hooking up on the run was always a whole lotta fun! <grin> I also made quite a few Hollywood jumps from UH1B helicopters, or Hueys as they were called. You could jump 4 men at a time and the jumpers would hook into D-rings on the floor of the chopper. Those were always the most fun because a "Hollywood Jump" meant no equipment other than the parachute. You'd just swing your legs out and onto the strut and then step off. No prop blast! Those jumps REALLY were fun. Even though I'm 66 now I would make a chopper blast in a heart beat if I was given the opportunity.
That's a great picture of you. Can you believe it that we were so young and studly once upon a time! Below is a pic of me that is on my town's Veteran's Wall. It is the pic that was taken of me in Jump School wearing a T10 mock-up...
I snapped that pic last year when I was showing our 2012 Club Knife, the Geppetto Whittler, around my town. We are fortunate to have such a lasting tribute to my town's fellow Veterans. I am proud to have served my Country. Here are a couple more pics of the Veteran's Wall to give you a better idea of what it looks like...
And now that I've thoroughly hi-jacked this thread I will close by thanking you for sparking some good memories from long ago. Cheers to you and your good friend Mike, without whom this trip down memory lane would have never been possible.
Jan Carter
Ken,
Your are so right about the economic man in your head
Jan 27, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Dumb question... Anyone out there have a couple rabbit pelts (properly cleaned and tanned, ready to use) that they'd like to part with for a cheap price?
Jan 28, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Won't do you any good now, but I used to have several that I bought at a gun show. I don't know why I bought them, but I wish I still had them.....for what reason I don't know.
Jan 29, 2013
In Memoriam
Robert Burris
Tobias, I have some made years ago by my wife. They are not in to good of shape. I wish they were, she was a novice at tanning.
Jan 29, 2013
J.J. Smith III
Toby, Check in with a local tandy Leather or craft store.
Jan 29, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Well, I'll be.......Amazon sells Rabbit fur pelts too!
http://www.amazon.com/Natural-White-Grade-Rabbit-Taxidermy/dp/B000L...
Jan 30, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Well I just won an auction for a rabbit pelt. $4.25 plus $5 for shipping. We'll see how it is. At $9.25 I'm thinking it'll do for the time being. Thanks for the other options. I've also seen the listings at Amazon and I still need to see if the nearby Hobby Lobby in Indiana carries them. I know it depends on the store and local attitudes some times.
Jan 30, 2013
Michael Lee Bibbey
Good morning everybody
Feb 2, 2013
Michael Lee Bibbey
I ' ve found some very interesting knives in boxes ,cansand swap days.
I do reconmend that you carry bandage, an have alot of time for storys,
some can be educational and some are not,thats part of the adventure
of knife collecting
Feb 2, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Just arrived from eBay. Winning bid: $3. Shipping: $4. Actual postage: $2.41 After paypal and ebay fees the seller probably made $2 on the deal. Anyway. I was bored and it looked interesting. A little boyscout multi-tool. Wrench/wirecutters plus three blades, Fine edge, serrated edge and screwdriver/file. Cutting edge are 1 3/4 inches on the blades. Overall length is 4 /14 inches. I'll need to do a little cleaning and get some coon-p on it but it seems to work well all blades have a good snap. Spring on pliers is strong. Made in China.
Feb 7, 2013
ken benson
Great find. Have you ever seen this particular knife before? A saw like this would pretty good in any hunting outfit, even useful for the little deer I shoot .
Feb 7, 2013
Billy Oneale
Feb 7, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Ken what knife with what saw? I didn't see the picture.
Feb 8, 2013
ken benson
Sorry More of a serrated edge, I must have deer hunting on the brain.
Since is a no longer a saw, I would pay you 4 dollars for it.
Feb 8, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Wish i could find more about it., Reminds me of the Marbles Fisherman Tool. Maxam also make something similar. The Marbles and Maxam both have more functions but this one has a larger set of pliers. I'm thiking about getting the Maxam. I already have the Marbles. Looks and works pretty good, especially for $7. (The Marbles was also $7)

Feb 8, 2013
Pat Kennedy
I have one similar to the BSA model below, received as a gift a few years back. It looks like it has the same pliers and basic blades/files but it also has a 1/4" square "blade" to use as a drive for the small sockets that came with it in it's nylon pouch.
Feb 9, 2013
ken benson
I have been inspired to give myself one of these Marbles tools and looking for Queen stockman with engraved bolsters. I could get choked up about how much I appreciate myself, .
Feb 9, 2013
Jan Carter
Ken,
LOL, well we appreciate you also. So go ahead and get yourself a new knife.
Toby,
That would make a nice tool to keep in my glovebox for the little things in life that just need a quick fix
Feb 14, 2013
Clint Thompson
Tobias...
Yes this would be a good glove box tool or even a fanny pack tool. I have seen these in Iraq with the wooden handles.
Feb 14, 2013
Jan Carter
I saw this online today and just had to share
Feb 16, 2013
Tobias Gibson
That's one heck of multi-blades Congress. Thanks for sharing Jan.
Feb 16, 2013
Lee Smith
Now that is cool.
Feb 16, 2013
Pat Kennedy
Feb 17, 2013
Ron Cooper
Looks like Frank Buster pulled out all the stops on that one, Jan! Those ultra long pulls on the two pen blades are certainly unusual. But then again so are the exaggerated drop points. I like the mini Wharncliffe opposite of the Sheepsfoot master blade! Lots of blade choices.
It's a cool cool Congress, fersure!
Feb 17, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Wow, a beautiful six blade Congress.....I like it........a lot!
Feb 17, 2013
Ron Cooper
How many blades on that Congress, Craig?
Feb 17, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Oh, six or seven......who's counting. Hey, give me a break, I'm an old guy. With one good eye. But I'm getting cataract surgery on the bad eye tomorrow! Then I'll see the other blade.
Feb 17, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Craig, if the Doctor shows up with a Sasquatch Slasher, rescedule that surgery. Good luck with the surgery. I'll say a prayer for you.
Feb 17, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Thanks Toby! I appreciate it!
I hope he does use the Sasquatch Slasher.....I want him to use only the best on my eye!
Feb 17, 2013
Ron Cooper
Craig,
Good luck on that surgery tomorrow. Oh! And you might to have your Doctor have a look at that "one good eye," too! lol
Sorry, bro! I just couldn't resist the opening you gave me. For real, all the best for you tomorrow!
Cheers, my broster!
Feb 17, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Thanks Ron! I appreciate it!
And hey, if I can dish it out, I better be able to take it! lol (I guess I better slow down and smell the roses....and look at the blades! lol)
Feb 17, 2013
Tobias Gibson
And the R-4 makes three! I'm pretty sure according to the Rules of Knife Collecting as laid down by Holy & Most Ancient Guild of Cutlery it is clearly stated that once a person owns three knives of the same brand they must announce that an unofficial accumulation of brands has taken place. Upon reaching five of the same Brand, he/she must announce an affinity for the brand and upon reach ten or more they become a novice collector of the brand. I'm publicly announcing that I have reached step one, an unofficial accumulation of Remington knives produced by Camillus.
Middle Left, Remington R3843 six blade Trailhand Bullet Knife. Also with Delrin handles, NOS with box and papers.
Bottom right, Remington R-12 Field & Steam Trapper, laminated wood handles. Unused & unsharpened. Light shelf wear, like new, no box, no papers (It was my first Remington, my first Trapper and it was given to me!) It is no longer lonely.
Feb 21, 2013
Ron Cooper
Toby, I love all 3! But I especially love the 6 bladed Trailhand and the R4 with the saw blade!
Congratulations on becoming an "unofficial accumulator!"
Feb 21, 2013
Jan Carter
Toby,
I have a feeling you actually have an affinity for the brand. The mailman is just slow. I agree with Ron, the Trailhand is so different than the rest that I am drawn to it
Feb 21, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Ooops, my mistake, The Remington R-12 Trapper is not a field & stream. The spay blade is etched "First in the Field" Sorry.
Feb 21, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Got three, that's it, you're a major Remington collector! LOL!
Feb 22, 2013
In Memoriam
Robert Burris
Tobias, I love the vintage Remington knives too, not sure of my standings in the group, I'll have to count.
Feb 24, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Another knife form Mike's Box (See a Real box of knives) This is a copy of the German Fallschirmjäger (Paratrooper's) Gravity knife. The knives were issued to German Paratroops in WWII. This is actually a Koren copy of the German made LL80, which was made illegal and banned from export. The blade is not spring loaded. You point the knife blade down, push the lever forward and the dlade slides out. Point the blade to the sky, push the lever forward the blade drops back in. quite a bit of blade play but the lock feels pretty positive. Nice long spike on the end for untying knots and poking holes in PE so you can stick in a detonator. As I'll never own the real deal, This Koren copy will have to do. I plan on repainting the handle.
Feb 27, 2013
ken benson
Toby I have asked a couple Paratroopers from the 82nd and the 101st, a smoke jumper or three and a hand full of sport parachutist, But I never got answers when I ask if they use those little folders to cut away a failure to deploy. They just give me that look.
Feb 27, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
Didn't know where else to post it, but, Here's my new knife cabinet from Shepherd Hills Cutlery.............. http://www.casexx.com/DisplayAccesoriesPageFH.asp?SubCatID=9
It's super nice! I couldn't have made it for the price myself especially considering all the labor.
The little shelves are removable, real glass front. Comes with hangers to attach so you can hang it on a wall.
Feb 28, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Very nice, Craig. Can I have it?
Feb 28, 2013
Featured
Craig Henry
You can have one just like it. I think Shepherd Hills will sell you one.......maybe. Do you have references?
Feb 28, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Sell? I don't understand this sell? What is sell?
Feb 28, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Hi Kirk, about cutting the risers on your parachute when it is fouled. I suppose it would be one way to pass the time until you reached the automatic stop! Having jumped a few times, I think I'd pop the reserve and pray it didn't get tangled in the malfunctioning main.
I jumped with T-10s and the -1 (dash one) parachutes. I can't recall if they had quick releases for a fouled canopy or not. I know the T-10 had a big "Press Here Button" that all the straps fed into. When you landed you would remove your reserve, pull the safety on the button and slap it. The whole 'chute harness would come loose. The Dash one also had quick release levers (three i believe) but again, you lost the whole 'chute including your reserve.
I think the switch blade was there so you cut yourself out of fouled harness when you were stuck in a tree or was being dragged by the wind and the quick releases failed. I don't think it was for cutting away the 'chute when you were still in the air.
Feb 28, 2013
Billy Oneale
Feb 28, 2013
Billy Oneale
Feb 28, 2013
ken benson
Any special tool is subject matter for jokes like the ignorant like me. I was a pilot in the 82nd and every month or so we would have a few jump missions and be asked to bring newspapers and tape pad the pointy places in our doors. The first time I was positive they were joking, even as while still taping. My stoke almost me forget the name of static line. From the low altitude and how fast they drop , and how hard they hit it seemed no malfunction could ever be salvaged. I am still have that recollection from 40 years ago . The troopers had confidence in their skills and equipment , it had to take real guts, but without that confidence would have said they were not scared spitless, I would only assume they were too crazy to possess a survival instinct. I saw only Ka-Bars and the like personalized taped rigs.
Feb 28, 2013
Ron Cooper
Here I am in 1964 shortly after I arrived at Ft. Campbell, KY. Home of the 101st Airborne Division ~ The Screaming Eagles! I was 17 years old at the time and was early on in my 3 year enlistment. I made a total of 35 static line jumps. All with T10 parachutes.
In the event that your primary chute malfunctioned you would immediately deploy your reserve parachute. Once you pulled the handle, or ripcord, you would feed the pilot chute out and away from your main chute to avoid a potential entanglement. Bear in mind that most conventional static line parachute jumps from fixed wing aircraft are done at relatively low altitudes. I jumped as low as 900 feet, but more commonly around 1250 to 1350 feet. I made helicopter jumps from higher altitudes -- as high as 1800 feet. HALO (High Altitude Low Opening) jumps are free falls and not made utilizing a static line. A static line is the length of nylon line that is attached to the deployment bag on the parachute and hooked to an anchor-line cable that runs the length of the fuselage inside of the aircraft the troopers are jumping from. Once the aircraft has been exited it is the static line that literally pulls the canopy from the jumper's parachute backpack. If the main chute does not open properly the jumper then has mere seconds to deploy their reserve chute.
So, you see, cutting the risers would not be the most expeditious thing to do. And as Toby mentioned there is a quick release that allows the jumper to slip out of the entire harness.
If the main chute and the reserve chute both failed to open properly we were instructed to bend all the way forward, lock our hands behind our knees, then stick our heads between our legs and kiss our ass good-bye! Sigh-O-Nara!
Bottom-line: I jumped with a knife strapped to my leg for much the same reason as I carry a knife on my person today in civilian life. It was just another tool that I might never need. But I always had it close at hand just in case I did. You know the old saying: "Better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it."
Airborne!
Mar 1, 2013
Tobias Gibson
Congrats to you Ron. I was just a five jump johnny. I was assigned to a mech Infantry unit in Germany (then west Germany) Had the joys of jumping from the C123 (not C130) and the C141. The rig in the photo is the T-10 Parachute harness. It does appear that you can pull on the two metal releases to free the entire canopy. However you, you're not to do that unless 1) Your reserve chute fails to deploy and 2) the main chute failed completely.
Ron, I can only imagine how jumping in starched fatigues had to feel!
Mar 1, 2013
Ron Cooper
Ah, yes! The "joy" of blasting a 123 with it's shorter fuselage and intensified prop blast. That was like jumping into the barrel of a cannon! And that's what I made my first 5 Jump School blasts out of at Ft. Benning, GA. I only made one jump from the huge C141 Starlifter, a jet aircraft. Most of my jumps were from 130's. Although I did made several jumps from the ancient C119 Flying Boxcar that on paper, much like the bumble bee, should not have been able to get off the ground. We also jumped from C124's which were double decked inside. Coming down the stairs and hooking up on the run was always a whole lotta fun! <grin> I also made quite a few Hollywood jumps from UH1B helicopters, or Hueys as they were called. You could jump 4 men at a time and the jumpers would hook into D-rings on the floor of the chopper. Those were always the most fun because a "Hollywood Jump" meant no equipment other than the parachute. You'd just swing your legs out and onto the strut and then step off. No prop blast! Those jumps REALLY were fun. Even though I'm 66 now I would make a chopper blast in a heart beat if I was given the opportunity.
That's a great picture of you. Can you believe it that we were so young and studly once upon a time! Below is a pic of me that is on my town's Veteran's Wall. It is the pic that was taken of me in Jump School wearing a T10 mock-up...
Carry-on, Trooper!
Mar 1, 2013