Screebo
Gold Member
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2023
- Messages
- 782
Are all these guys animal actors?We’re having beautiful weather today and the gangs all here. Wishing everyone a nice day today too.
View attachment 2390965
View attachment 2390966


The BladeForums.com 2024 Traditional Knife is ready to order! See this thread for details:
https://www.bladeforums.com/threads/bladeforums-2024-traditional-knife.2003187/
Price is $300 $250 ea (shipped within CONUS). If you live outside the US, I will contact you after your order for extra shipping charges.
Order here: https://www.bladeforums.com/help/2024-traditional/ - Order as many as you like, we have plenty.
Are all these guys animal actors?We’re having beautiful weather today and the gangs all here. Wishing everyone a nice day today too.
View attachment 2390965
View attachment 2390966
I think someone spilled something on your knife!!
Gorgeous liquid pattern ...like flowing eddies !One Of My Favorite Reate Jacks For Today___![]()
![]()
Very cool ! Just needs a nice genuine ,classic, vintage Luger pistol , to go with ...for pics .Weird Wednesday with a true weird lock grail piece, I never thought I'd actually get to play with a Track Knives "Luger Knife"Here's a great writeup by American Blade Magazine not long after these came out:
"The Track Toggle Knife has become a rare collectors item, even though it wasn't intended to be. The original concept was to mass produce a uniquely designed knife with an operating mechanism similar to that of the renowned Luger pistol. Here was a product that would sell itself to every guy who ever owned, or thought of owning, a Parabellum.
The design blueprints for the knife were submitted by Track to Carl Crumbley, a precision mechanist, for a working model and extensive production cost analysis. When the verdict was delivered, it was decided that the knife's intricate mechanism made it too complicated to mass produce. Each knife has 33 parts and requires 185 individual production operations. Additionally, its intricacy and close tolerance parts require hand fitting. The toggle assembly itself requires 58 production operations. The D-2 steel blade rotates on an eccentric cam which can be adjusted for tightness or wear. A spring loaded ball bearing maintains a constant pressure on the blade when it is in the unlocked position and another spring loaded bearing on the rear of the toggle maintains the proper locking pressure.
After some serious soul searching, Track decided to go ahead with the project anyway, but on a limited rather than mass production. Sales of the knife went very well, but production was another matter. A mid-production cost analysis revealed that the cost exceeded the sale price. Fully-paid orders were delivered, but deposits on the rest of the knives were immediately returned, pending a revamp of production plans. The price of the knife was subsequently increased, and many who had originally ordered, redeposited their money-sensing the potential collector value in these knives.
The total production figures are: One all brass working model; three pre-production prototypes (serial lettered A,B, and C); and 103 production knives, of which 73 have brass bolsters and cocobolo wood scales (serial numbers 1-70 and 98-100), 27 have brass bolsters and Sambar Stag scales(serial numbers 71-97), and three have titanium bolsters and Sambar Stag (serial numbers Titanium 1-3). Also, one knife (number 78) was engraved by Angelo Bee when they considered offering an engraved model.
It takes a mechanically inclined person to fully appreciate the intricacy of the Track Toggle knife, but its story is as intriguing as the knife itself. It might even be called a collector's dream that emerged from a production engineer's nightmare.
Serial #59 of 100
Made in 1976
Excellent condition
3 1/4" blade of D-2 tool steel, mirror polish
7 5/8" opened length
4 3/4" closed length
Weight 9.6oz
Brass frame
Cocobolo wood scales"
View attachment 2391762
View attachment 2391763
Weird Wednesday with a true weird lock grail piece, I never thought I'd actually get to play with a Track Knives "Luger Knife"Here's a great writeup by American Blade Magazine not long after these came out:
"The Track Toggle Knife has become a rare collectors item, even though it wasn't intended to be. The original concept was to mass produce a uniquely designed knife with an operating mechanism similar to that of the renowned Luger pistol. Here was a product that would sell itself to every guy who ever owned, or thought of owning, a Parabellum.
The design blueprints for the knife were submitted by Track to Carl Crumbley, a precision mechanist, for a working model and extensive production cost analysis. When the verdict was delivered, it was decided that the knife's intricate mechanism made it too complicated to mass produce. Each knife has 33 parts and requires 185 individual production operations. Additionally, its intricacy and close tolerance parts require hand fitting. The toggle assembly itself requires 58 production operations. The D-2 steel blade rotates on an eccentric cam which can be adjusted for tightness or wear. A spring loaded ball bearing maintains a constant pressure on the blade when it is in the unlocked position and another spring loaded bearing on the rear of the toggle maintains the proper locking pressure.
After some serious soul searching, Track decided to go ahead with the project anyway, but on a limited rather than mass production. Sales of the knife went very well, but production was another matter. A mid-production cost analysis revealed that the cost exceeded the sale price. Fully-paid orders were delivered, but deposits on the rest of the knives were immediately returned, pending a revamp of production plans. The price of the knife was subsequently increased, and many who had originally ordered, redeposited their money-sensing the potential collector value in these knives.
The total production figures are: One all brass working model; three pre-production prototypes (serial lettered A,B, and C); and 103 production knives, of which 73 have brass bolsters and cocobolo wood scales (serial numbers 1-70 and 98-100), 27 have brass bolsters and Sambar Stag scales(serial numbers 71-97), and three have titanium bolsters and Sambar Stag (serial numbers Titanium 1-3). Also, one knife (number 78) was engraved by Angelo Bee when they considered offering an engraved model.
It takes a mechanically inclined person to fully appreciate the intricacy of the Track Toggle knife, but its story is as intriguing as the knife itself. It might even be called a collector's dream that emerged from a production engineer's nightmare.
Serial #59 of 100
Made in 1976
Excellent condition
3 1/4" blade of D-2 tool steel, mirror polish
7 5/8" opened length
4 3/4" closed length
Weight 9.6oz
Brass frame
Cocobolo wood scales"
View attachment 2391762
View attachment 2391763
I’ve had this too for quite some time. Can’t believe they’re not more popular. Outstanding folder in premium materials.
You should have to be over 18 to look at something that SEXY!