Restoring a Vintage Military Survival Knife - [ Relaxing ]
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- Опубліковано 2 лис 2024
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I was a Crew Chief on Hueys and Black Hawks in the Army. We were issued these Camillus knives with our survival vests. Army called it "Knife, Aircrewman, Survival". I still have mine from 40+ years ago. I wore it on my belt as an EDC after the Army working construction doing pipeline maintenance. I found some use for it almost every day.
I have a new Camillus now. I don't use it much as I'm paralyzed and retired. I think the Camillus has a better point profile than the Ontario brand. More like a fighting knife. So, now my original Camillus rests with the two Nazi Daggers my father brought home from WW2.
That is a pilot survival knife that was developed for airmen in the early 60's and issued to pilots in the Vietnam War. I just received this knife from my father in law who was a helicopter pilot. It is in similiar condition. Your video has given me ideas on how to clean it up, but still keep the character of the knife. Really enjoy the content of your videos.
That is a USAF Air Crew Survival Knife,the hex shaped Hammer Pommel is the indicator, also shorter blade broader in proportion to its lengththan the KaBar.
US Navy issued that knife to aviators as well.
We used those in SERE training. The instructors call them “bolt knives”
Awewsome! Thanks for the extra information gentlemen!
Yep, the "official" nomenclature is: "Knife, Survival, U.S. Air Force", but it is commonly issued by all of the military services...
USCG issued also
What I like the most is your restoration keeps the character of the knife. Restoration doesn’t mean remanufacture. It remains an old friend. Thank you for sharing.
"Restoration doesn’t mean remanufacture."
It means to restore (return) it, as closely as possible, to the condition it was in when it was new. There was no restoration in this video, it was a refurbishment.
I have that exact knife that was my father's. I've been trying to figure out if I should do this, or leave it. Something like this has so much history caked on it. Hard for me to wipe it all away, when it belonged to someone so close. Every nick in the leather, crack in the stone, etc. It all tells a tale. A glorious tale.
Agreed, tough decisions. Notice that after this restoration, most of the character remains. All of those subtle marks in the leather. Scratches on the blade. A few nics in the pommel, etc. I chose to leave them, because they are so valuable. BUT, now the knife is clean and fresh, and doesn't dirty your hands to hold it. It will likely get the appreciation it deserves now, placed on a mantle or in a case to oogle, rather than sitting in a box in the attic.
My Dad too, EDC’d one of those during most of his career as a Marine Corps Warrant Officer! Only when in his class A “greens,” or on some other such occasion, did he eschew having it on his belt. When my Brother & I went thru our many scouting adventures, he had it, as well as when he deployed overseas for stints to non-combat environs. His trusty K-Bar was for the more serious situations! He’s been gone now for close to 20 years, but both are in my possession! I watched this vid w/great interest, and will incorporate some procedures as normal maint. and preservation in order that one of my nephews or my grandson might inherit them in proper condition. I wish you the best of luck with your heirloom, and can only encourage you to remember that your father performed routine cleaning and etc. in order to keep it in ready condition. I think neither of us should let sentiment allow any deterioration, and say that non-accusatory and with all due respect! Thanks for his service...
@@kyle_noseworthy I agree, it was just so horrible, dirty and worn that it was no good for anything. Now it’s something to be proud of and still with all the character and battle scars. I carried the Gerber ASEK , its got some scars and the sheath is covered in sniper tape and spray painted desert tones but it will never have that beautiful aged look that leather does. Good job!
My knife was issued in flight school at Hunter AAF and it made the trip to Nam. The sheath on all of the issue knives that I saw was different from the one here, but the the knife was the same. These blades were Parkerized when new and I am not certain that a restoration the removes the rust and the finish is really a restoration. I broke the tip on mine and resharpened it to reform the tip and sharpen the false edge. I also stoned the sides below the fuller to flatten them and create a better profile for a cutting edge. So most of the original finish is remains above the fuller and on the guard and pommel, along with some patina from rust.
The leather handle is dark and hard from use an age. The sheath is stained and scratched. The knife was always loose in the sheath and the strap is and always was too big. While I was flying scouts the knife was hardly out of the sheath. Some days it stayed on the ground. The .38, the extra ammo, the survival radio, the survival vest, and the ceramic chicken plate and the M3 just seemed like enough to carry. Back home it was the fixed blade to keep in the car or take hiking or camping, though it got more use as a hammer and utility cutter than as knife, no woodsy stuff.
Anyway no restoration for mine, it was made in 1967 and will outlast me. Then some SOB will toss it or pay $5 bucks for it as the sale, never knowing that it was at Quan Loi, in Cambodia, at Di An and Vung Tau. That it flew in an OH-6 with scout from the Air Cav Troop of the 11th ACR. Allons.
Your videos are my absolute favourite. The music, your work ethic, the attention to detail... all of it. It’s a pleasure to watch.
Always watching from Alberta 👍🏼 keep it up
Thanks so much Denis! I'll do my best to continue!
Good job Kyle I get much satisfaction when refurbishing old blades keep up the good work
Love to see anything cleaned fixed or restored.
Hi Kyle, I really enjoyed this relaxed restoration video. I love restoring old hand tools and I always learn from your videos. Cheers
thanks Stephen!
Beautiful work!! I'm thinking of attempting the same thing.
Bringing one of these pieces of history back to life
Compared to the USMC K-Bar infantrymens knife,.....these Camilius air crewman survival knives have SO MUCH MORE character. The guards kinda qwurkey. The hex head pommel is absolutely brutal in its design. A no nonsense, no frills, git'er done son beater. Love that knife. Whoever that knife is going to,...is going to be very pleased. I love how you dont go to far past the knifes patina. You hover perfectly between tribute and original. Well done sir. Very well done.
I love your videos and the work that you do. May God bless you.
A new member and I amazed at the effort and the beauty you brought out this project can't wait to see more.
Thanks John! Welcome!
That’s a great restoration. The only suggestion I would have made would be bluing the blade. These knives were survival knives so they purposely blued the blade and handle etc. to avoid having any reflective parts.
They were parkerized not blued.
Yep, these knives came Parkerized to keep from reflecting to enemy troops. Still do. Only thing shiny on it was the blade edge. They were kind of like the Marine K-Bar's little brother.
I agree that the blade should be parkerised however I don't believe it's possible to restore that finish without completely dismantling the knife.
Excellent restoration!
Definitely a US Air Force pilot survival knife. I had one but it got stolen. Oh well. Nice work on the knife.
Sorry you lost it!
Yes however most soliders were issued a kabar or Kabar styled combat/utility knife
Amazing work! Thank you for taking the time and work to post this. Very relaxing and entertaining.
Very nice Kyle, I’m sure the owner will be impressed. Like the fact that you left a lot of the history on it as well. 👍
that peace of history is sooooo cool
This is a thing of beauty, and the knife kit is fantastic too!
Truly impressive. I learned a great deal from watching, especially that careful attention to simple techniques can yield extrodinary results. Well-done.
I appreciate and agree with your professed restoration mantra..
It looks great. Nice work.
There’s a fine line between restoration and f*ckng up! You sir have that skill!
We have that knife, it's amazing! We bring it with us on every hike.
Cool video and I like your taste in music
This is an awesome video! I was just told I'm inheriting one of these relatively soon, and I have no idea what shape it's going to be in. If it's in a similar state, now I have tons of ideas on how to restore it to its former glory while keeping my grandfather's history intact.
that's one of the early 6" blade jet pilots issue knives, a rare piece of history. I have one I restored to original military finish, with parkerized blade etc. mint condition ones are worth a small fortune
How small a fortune??? I got mine in the USAF in 1984. Mint condition. I never thought it was worth anything! Seldom used, it still the un-used sharpening stone.
Back in the day, Marines use to get hold of those as well. They use to issue them to crew members in aviation units in the Navy. Nice restoration, however, those knives were of a parkerized finish for tactical purposes.
Love the life style u live my friend ALOHA FROM HAWAII 🤙
I thought it was a K Bar at first good job man
A commentary listing materials used would make it much better
Stunning result! I really enjoyed this video - I like the no music no fuzz
thanks Lars! It was certainly a different style for me, but I may try to incorporate it more often.
Hi Kyle. I've been watching for some time now and decided to subscribe. I went ahead and ordered up a set of Naniwa Super Stones from Pauls Finest after watching you and speaking with Paul. 400, 1000 and 5000 grits. I am an amateur next to you but love the old disciplines and especially freehand sharpening.
Any time I take on a new hobby, I become obsessed.....
Thanks for the great vids
that looks like the airforce survival knife of the 60/70's.
Great job and a fantastic end result
Cheers
Ian
Thanks Ian!
Thats a bad ass knife!
I want that knive...thank you for sharing. Cheers from Portugal
that's a beautiful job on the sheath . Nice work
Well done!!!!
My grandfather had that exact knife that is now in possession of my dad
My father has the same one too but it is from Vietnam it ist? his he traded it as a child what is yours from
A purdy sob. Thanks for the vid!
What products were used at the various stages? Soaps, solvents, oils, etc.
Awesome video as always
What type of wire wheels on your bench grinders you using?
Sehr schönes Video, und ich muss sagen, wirklich tolle Arbeit mit dem Messer. Das was du machst würde mir auch sehr viel Freude und Spaß machen. Mach weiter so! 👍
I was lucky to get one of these (second hand, of course) at a military surplus store. Unfortunately, a part of the leather section on the handle had deteriorated over the years and needs to be replaced. Any suggestions on this?
I have a Ka-Bar that my grandfather used in the Pacific during WWII. Do you do restoration for others?
Nice knife,..good clean up too,....the 'finished product' would look really nice on my belt LOL! What a great piece to have,.the owner is a lucky guy!
haha Thanks for watching, Reg!
I carried a Ontario 499 survival knife in the Army back in 85’…
Great video. I really enjoy your work. If at all possible could you show toward the camera the lable of the stuff you are applying to the projects? Thanks again for the great content...
Very very good!
Well done!
Real nice job. Beautiful knfe.
knife. I have the newer version and like it alot.
Fine work!
A masterpiece thanks for the demo
What was the clear liquid oil that you used on the sheath just prior to the mink oil and buff? I’m guessing mineral oil but would rather not guess.
My only problem here, as beautiful as this is, is that every one of these knives that I own wether issued to me or purchased or issued to some I know has the blade coated with an anodized black substance that keeps it protected to a degree from corrosion but is mostly to prevent a going of light when it is out of its sheath. By polishing the metal on the knife yo7 have rendered it useless as a military survival knife. Still, beautiful job and still useful as a hunting/regular survival knife. Good job!
I think around the years of manufacturing this knife, they didn't have any anodized substance on it. 60's and 70's Camillus ones, to be exact.
Mine is a 1973, I got new when I was in the Air Force. Wasn't issued it since I was a medic. I traded something for it. What date is yours. It should be on the pommel. Good job by the way.
Ontario still makes this knife.
This is a rare 6" pilots survival knife, taking the parkerizing off hurts value for sure.
Man that looks so good
what do you use to get sheath a reddish darker bown & knife handle
Great job.
These knife had a sand color sheth and the blade pomal where blued or parkerised black/green in color
Great Job !
Nice looking knife, when done. However, the original was likely anodized black, on the blade and the fittings. Fortunately that one is not an actual historical blade, as it looks to be a civilian model of the Air Force Pilots knife. The Air Force Knife, however, had/has a black metal tip on the sheath, where the tie downs go.
The Air Force survival knife was introduced by Camillus in 1974. Too late to be carried in Vietnam, as some claim.
Been watching a few of your vids. I like what I'm seeing.
Great work. I'm not sure how I feel about wiping away the years built up on that piece.
Also, a military knife would have all the brass painted black. And most civilian purchased blades like this were also all black. Love that you've fixed them back to a good user blade. Just hate that they are brite metal and not the original black.
A good replacement would be to blue everything. With a high polish, and bluing. this would be a gem.
Air Force Survival Knife, Vietnam Era.
Beautiful man...
LMAO it's Jan 2 2021. This Premiered Jan 23 2020.
Totally read it as Jan 23 2021 and was like ... Wut?!
Thought it was funny so I shared the laugh.
hi kyle. Just wanted to say that a kabar is not a survival knife. It is a rattail tang combat knife.
Im sure you know by now, its a USAF pilot survival knife
New subscribe excellent job
I have one, original issue to me.from the 1960s, with the original sheath
I used to have a Camillus knife like this. My uncle, who was in the South African Defence Force, gave it to me. Not sure how he got it.
I cringed when I watched you polish those rivets on the sheath. I would suggest using bullet shaped, rubber sanding bits. It will keep you from nicking up the leather. Great work!
Hello. What products did you use to restore the sheath?
Looks like some sort of tanner, some sort of wax, and an oil?
Trying to restore my OKC 1974 pilots knife also
I have background in leatherwork.
1st. He cleaned it with saddlesoap.
2nd. He used oil based brown leather dye to redye it after he sanded it to expose the raw leather.
3. He sealed edges with beeswax.
4. Looks like neatsfoot oil. To moisturize the sheath. (Do not put neatsfoot oil on the stacked leather handle of the knife or you'll ruin it since oil makes leather soft and plyable.)
@@SoldierDrew thank you for the info!
I hope that was saddle soap you used to clean the leather..
Whats the solution that you applied on the leather?
Well that was pretty good. But If I were doing this restoration....I'm screwing with you. Excellent Job and Video :-) Your videos inspired me to try and sharpen a new knife that I got. It's a BareBones Japanese style garden knife. Some call it a HoriHori. Anyway, it was dull as shit. So After watching hours of your vids, I bought a stone kit from amazon. Not a great one like yours, but a decent starter kit. I grinded on that 350 stone for hours. Later that night, I realized that filed off my middle 3 fingers. It hurt for days :-) I'll try again another day. But I'll probably wear the gloves that were included in the kit. Well, maybe not. I hate gloves :-) Thanks Bro, From Indianapolis.
I have that same knife, belonged to my father in law. Been debating if i should restore it or not. Just might go a head after watching this.
Side note: the sheath on mine seems lower quality leather an it has a metal accoutrement at the tip of the sheath. The cross gard is loose so might have to go as far as adding leather to the stack. Any suggestions to avoid that?
@@maverick4462 You could just hold it in place and get some cyanoacrylate in there? A few drops should tack it in place, and then you could either add more, or squeeze in a thicker epoxy to take up the slack!
@@kyle_noseworthy awesome I'll try that. My wife's father was a helicopter door gunner in Vietnam so I suspect it was the one he carried. Its been well loved😉 Thank you.
What are you using on the leather after staining?
something as deadly and u made it look so beautiful
what is the cream you are using on 15:03 ? (white cup )
Is that a 6 inch blade?
Very nice work, I collect a lot of vintage items that I feature on my channel and I will on occasion do some light cleaning of an item. But I always prefer to leave the original finish if at all possible.
I’ve always been told mink oil will ruin leather in the long run?
Super vidéo, j'aime ce que tu fais mais les bruit ambiant sont trop prononcé.
Great video, I like what you do but the ambient noise is too loud
Bonne continuation, Good continuation.
Chris Ford lol from university
EPIC FAIL👎👎👎👎🫤🫤🫤🫤🤮🤮🤮🤮😬😬😬😬
Scouring pad??
Wonderful😍😢💂💪❤👍👍👍👍
What kind of dressing on the leather grip?
Fiebings Mink Oil!
I have that exact knife it has proven to be fairly difficult to sharpen with conventional whet stone. Can anyone tell me the type of steel it is made of? Certianly not an exotic, but just very hard steel. Thanks!
I have one made out of 1095 high carbon steel.
You can use a diamond hone to sharpen it. Be patient as it's hardness is a blessing. It will hold a great edge once sharp.
Should say Ontario on it.
great apple peeler ...
I have my uncle's one that he use in vietnam