Jack Black Knives U1, Pat Mitchell Made

Stuart Mitchell

Well-Known Member
Another blast from the past, the U1 was developed through '93 and the very few that were made were made early '94.

Jack Black was the pen name of a local outdoors writer, mountaineering, hiking, kayaking, that type of stuff, he wrote for a few national magazines at that time.

Jack and we developed it jointly, he put a lot of work in behind the scenes, in particular talking to HT companies in order to attain the very best from the SF77 steel, I mean cryo quenching in '93, it was almost unheard of.

He marketed the knife through the magazines that he wrote for and it was taking off (even though we thought him crazy going in with a starter price tag of £130, in 1994), he was a visitor to the workshop most days, definitely every week, then one day just stopped, never heard from him, never saw him, like he'd fallen from the face of the earth.

Anyway, here is the knife...



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Another blast from the past, the U1 was developed through '93 and the very few that were made were made early '94.

Jack Black was the pen name of a local outdoors writer, mountaineering, hiking, kayaking, that type of stuff, he wrote for a few national magazines at that time.

Jack and we developed it jointly, he put a lot of work in behind the scenes, in particular talking to HT companies in order to attain the very best from the SF77 steel, I mean cryo quenching in '93, it was almost unheard of.

He marketed the knife through the magazines that he wrote for and it was taking off (even though we thought him crazy going in with a starter price tag of £130, in 1994), he was a visitor to the workshop most days, definitely every week, then one day just stopped, never heard from him, never saw him, like he'd fallen from the face of the earth.

Then a good while later whilst watching the local news the 'Pomona Incident' had run it's course in the courts and was covered, we then discovered that Jack's real name was Mark.

The Pomona Incident....

Anyway, here is the knife...



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Interesting. Have you ever thought of lining up the screw slots like H&H do on their actions?

S
 
Interesting. Have you ever thought of lining up the screw slots like H&H do on their actions?

S
Even then though you can see I knew that as the goal, if you look at the line drawing on the pamphlet, I drew that, front screw ever so slightly raked forward, centre one at 90 degrees with the centre line of the knife and rear screw raked backwards, that was the ideal.

There was a lot of brute force and ignorance fitting those screws in those days though, when they were tight, they were tight, a backwards turn would have been loose and a there was no forwards turn 😂
 
Even then though you can see I knew that as the goal, if you look at the line drawing on the pamphlet, I drew that, front screw ever so slightly raked forward, centre one at 90 degrees with the centre line of the knife and rear screw raked backwards, that was the ideal.

There was a lot of brute force and ignorance fitting those screws in those days though, when they were tight, they were tight, a backwards turn would have been loose and a there was no forwards turn 😂
Yea I see that. My ocd would need them
All parallel with the line of the handle
 
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Looking at the blade I see alot of similarity to the .muntjac x. Did the idea for muntjac and muntjac x come from the Jack Black.
 
Interesting. Have you ever thought of lining up the screw slots like H&H do on their actions?

S
The trouble with lining up screw slots is that each screw ends up either being backed off slightly or over tightened in order to match its neighbour, with the result that the strength of the finished item is compromised.
 
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