Picked up another 110 pawn knife out of Stevensville MT

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May have been taken apart at some point, judging by the way those bolsters are banged up.
 
Man, you guys stay up late. I don't know what was done to the rear pin but an easy fix. Also, it has a good full blade and the scratches can be
taken out. Did you get the sheath? DM
 
5 ver., var. 1. It could be 4 ver. var 1 or var 2? For me some question. Brass spacer. Not much difference in all of these. Apparently one of these had a brass rocker pin. At least on my data sheets that was a possiblity, 1970-72. Nice matching wood. DM
 
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Ummmmm......no, SportingSpecialist nailed it with the correct answer long before David Martin's post that gave three possibilities.
 
What's your problem with DM???

Guy has been a member here for 9+ years, has almost 14,000 comments, promotes Buck at shows on his own dime, and is an reputable resource for information these old Buck knives. Yet you seem to have been hounding him for the last few days.

Where's your meaningful contribution to these conversation?

<enter the critics to call me out for calling someone else out>
 
sportingspecialist was right. I see no trouble with DM. Only that he puts more than one answer. Your the Mister Troublemaker so nothing has changed.The hole on the left side of the rear bolster is a blind hole stops somewhere in the middle of the bolster, not a pin hole.
 
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@MICHAELGINNYBIGONE: I didn't even mention one of your names and you come here merely to call me a troublemaker...

Congrats!
 
Sorry sport I have one name and every right, same as you, to verse my opinion. I don't need you're approval to voice my honest opinion. Since I know so much about you I'll leave it at that. I contributed what are you doing ?
 
Hello Everyone,
I am new here and I would like to contribute but don't know about versions and variations. Can someone clue me in?
 
Joe,

Welcome to the forum. The early 110 knives had no identification of dates for manufacturing. From 1964 until 1986 the only way to try and date the knives was to look at the characteristics of the knife. Joe Houser of Buck Knives developed an outline for dating the knives. Major changes are called versions with variations occurring within a particular version. That scheme is listed as a "sticky" on this forum (at the top of the first page) as the 110 data sheet. Joe's scheme is the most popular but another one, looking at different characteristics, was done by George Stinzel.

Bert
 
Thank You Bertl,
That was very informative and just what I was wondering about. It is very helpful to look at the different characteristics. Thanks again I will look at both.
 
here we go again.

having two people give the right answer isnt a bad thing. most call that a good thing being double verified.

thanks to both for the info, i personally appreciate learning from everyone.
 
Got the 110 done today and a 112 2 dot I picked up at another Pawn shop a couple weeks ago. Danny replaced the blade with a time period correct blade. The original blade was damaged where it couldnt be seen and the sloppy action would not of been repaired otherwise. This 110 was in sad shape, Now it looks and works like a new one. These do a great job. Plus a 6 pack of Mountain Dew to them doesnt hurt either.
Here are some pics.
 
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