Sirs, Came across a couple of daggers in my travels today......One was an SA dagger made by Carl Eickhorn......Appears to be a complete inscription ground Rohm on the backside......Now I know Eickhorn made these, but did they distribute these without marking the crossguard with appropriate initials? This one is lacking any such mark......Condition of blade is very good......Handle has a big chip on the front which is about 1/4"-3/8" wide.......No hanger.....Nickel fittings.....Asking price is $250......Good price?...... Sound original?.......Any comments appreciated......Thanks,Bodes
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Eickhorn Ground Rohm Question....
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You would actually expect to find the Rohm daggers devoid of Gruppe markings.
There may be a single digit (referred to as a bench number) on the underside of the lower crossguard.
Photos are needed to determine what you really have but, if it is indeed an original ground Rohm SA in decent shape, it would be a very good deal @ $250.00. Be careful, though...sounds too good to be true.
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Originally posted by Bernie BruleBodes, no way of telling without pics. If it's original it's a steal.
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My gut tells me it's original though......It has a well aged look to it......
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Originally posted by WizardBe careful, I heard that they are grounding off the fake Rohm inscriptions and selling it as a genuine ground Rohm. In which case, ground Rohms are worth no more, or maybe even less, than unmessed with blades. My opinion.
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Also, the only "fake grinding" that should be of concern is the actual grinding of daggers that were NEVER Rohms to begin with. It's tragic, but some people have taken to grinding the reverse of a blade to sell it as a ground Rohm. It's not being done to "boost the price" by turning it into a ground Rohm, but more likely, to hide reverse blemishes in an otherwise nice blade. The reasoning goes that it'd be better (more lucrative) to sell a ground rohm than a standard SA or SS with blemishes caused by age and wear. On the other hand, when "they" grind a spurious inscription, they turn the already-questionable blade into a partial ground, having obscured the "problematic" features of the inscription. Of course, the bulk of these spurious blades are Eickhorn marked blades, and the TM is in the wrong place anyway (being too far away from the crossguard).
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Craig,
You're right...I misspoke in my post re the Gau marks. Firast, I referred to them as Gruppe marks (which they are not!) and secondly, I should have said that the absence of a Gau mark is not necessarily indicative of a bad piece. When I re-read my post, it suggests that most did not have them which is not true.
Thanks for keeping me straight!
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