Lakeside Trader - 2nd Banner

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

HJ Dagger by WKC Solingen

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    HJ Dagger by WKC Solingen

    A nice, weathered but solid HJ Dagger by WKC Solingen
    Attached Files

    #2
    some more photos
    Attached Files

    Comment


      #3
      The trademark & motto look like they have been added to the blade, either that the blade has been added to the hilt post war ?

      Can you show a clear pic of the rivets on the plain grip side ?

      No RZM stamp on a blade with ricasso on a late WKC hj is not correct imo.

      Comment


        #4
        Like Mac I'm not very keen on this piece. I owned one from 1938 with the motto and they are marked on the ricasso.


        Regards, Wim
        Freedom is not for Free

        Comment


          #5
          Very interesting indeed.

          Comment


            #6
            Here are some more photos.
            Attached Files

            Comment


              #7
              The diamond insignia looks like a repro & the rivets are aluminium repair type.

              i do not like this knife at all .

              Comment


                #8
                An alloy hilt with short finger guard was rarely used on mottoed HJ-knifes.

                WKC does have many variations when it comes to maker marks, but from 1936 on they used the double mark (knight + RZM code and year of production).

                This firm did use an alloy hilt on their very last mottoed, 1938-made, HJ-knifes but in combination with the double mark (see pic, 2nd knife from right).

                So I also have serious doubt about the WKC HJ shown here...

                Best regards,

                Victorman

                PS: also note the evolution of the ricasso on WKC-knifes
                Attached Files

                Comment


                  #9
                  Many thanks for your informative feedback! So this HJ Dagger is a "frankenstein" made up from different parts, a fake or what else? I wonder who would go to such lengths for a quite common item, which do not fetch high prices?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    The donor knife may have been a post war Scout knife, quite cheap to obtain, so I could see a motivation there. But these days with internet it's harder for these fraudsters pass these things off as authentic. As has just been demonstrated in this thread.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      many thanks for the responses Gentlemen, I will make sure to stay away from this one, then.
                      Kind regards,

                      Comment

                      Users Viewing this Thread

                      Collapse

                      There is currently 1 user online. 0 members and 1 guests.

                      Most users ever online was 10,032 at 08:13 PM on 09-28-2024.

                      Working...
                      X