Picked this up a while ago and wanted to post, I was told is a Japanese bayonet blade and was brought home by a Marine after the war.
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Japanese Bayonet with Arm Bone as grip
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To elaborate my comments, the bayonet blade used as the basis for this knife is not Japanese. It looks like British bayonet of so sort. You could argue it being Russian or Chinese, or even American (Model 1917. Hello!). I'm sure it's not Japanese.
The use of bone for knife handle is not normally found in Japanese knives.
The S shape handguard is not in the Japanese tradition.
That's three strikes.
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The title is "Japanese Bayonet with Arm Bone as grip".
The body is "...., I was told is a Japanese bayonet blade and was brought home by a Marine after the war. "
Twice he mentioned "Japanese bayonet". I want to point out the knife blade is not from a salvaged Japanese bayonet. So you think the arm bone is Japanese? That doesn't make an otherwise who-knows-what knife a "Japanese bayonet knife". Think about it. If you use a dog bone for handle, does it make the knife become a dog knife? Of course not.
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Originally posted by oldhonda View PostDon't laugh, there's a learning curve for all of us. These days we can't take pictures and post them online for questions before making a purchase or bidding. Awhile ago, (that's a long while ago) these things were simply not possible.
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I'm laughing at how worked up you got over the wording the poster used. It would have been just as easy to say "it's not a Japanese blade, perhaps it's British. Considering the Australians and US fought together in the Pacific it could have been a souvenir from an Army veteran in New Guinea?" Instead you come across as an old guy with an unsuccessful morning stool.
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Most users ever online was 10,032 at 08:13 PM on 09-28-2024.
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