Uncle Henry 707UH
-
- Posts: 13373
- Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
- Location: West Kootenays, B.C.
Uncle Henry 707UH
The 707UH is a 2 3/4" 2 blade serpentine jack in which the secondary is scissors, and has a bail.
I have 2 of these, both marked the same: Schrade+/U.S.A. 707UH.
One has the pen blade in the master position, the other has the scissors in the master position. Both function equally well.
Were these assembled 'willy-nilly' with the cutler inserting blades in which ever position he felt like ? Or is one of these correct and the other a 'mistake' ?
kj
I have 2 of these, both marked the same: Schrade+/U.S.A. 707UH.
One has the pen blade in the master position, the other has the scissors in the master position. Both function equally well.
Were these assembled 'willy-nilly' with the cutler inserting blades in which ever position he felt like ? Or is one of these correct and the other a 'mistake' ?
kj
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
I was just looking at the Schrade research section page, as I myself thought it only came with scissors. Apparently, in 1984, Schrade produced the first 707UH (with the pen blade) which was produced "in low numbers for two years only". Then, in 1991, it was reintroduced, but with scissors replacing the pen blade.
I have these scissors on the 106OT. They easily rival (if not surpass) the Swiss.
I have these scissors on the 106OT. They easily rival (if not surpass) the Swiss.
- Meridian_Mike
- Posts: 4981
- Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2014 8:36 pm
- Location: Mississippi
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
LOL... that is wild, Roland. The blades swapped sides
I have a couple of the 106OTs....
As I understand it, the US made 106OTs were low number produced too.
They seem to run about $100 each. (If you can find 'em)
I have a couple of the 106OTs....
As I understand it, the US made 106OTs were low number produced too.
They seem to run about $100 each. (If you can find 'em)
"Life is tough.... but it's tougher if you're stupid."....John Wayne
-
- Posts: 13373
- Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
- Location: West Kootenays, B.C.
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
Here is my 106OT. The tang marking is hard to read as the "6" could also be an "8". However it is a 106OT.
Quote Mike: "As I understand it, the US made 106OTs were low number produced too.
They seem to run about $100 each. (If you can find 'em"
That is good news as when i was actively collecting Schrade knives very few people were interested in folding knives with scissors. I find scissors to be a very useful tool so i could not understand why others did not 'go for' these knives.
kj
Quote Mike: "As I understand it, the US made 106OTs were low number produced too.
They seem to run about $100 each. (If you can find 'em"
That is good news as when i was actively collecting Schrade knives very few people were interested in folding knives with scissors. I find scissors to be a very useful tool so i could not understand why others did not 'go for' these knives.
kj
- Meridian_Mike
- Posts: 4981
- Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2014 8:36 pm
- Location: Mississippi
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
All the 106OTs I have found have been in about the same shape as yours, Roland....
Mine is in "cleaned-up" condition.
The other 2 I have are uncleaned.
I have seen some that are in "like new" condition without the box listed for $150...
(dang... that sho' is expensive)
Mine is in "cleaned-up" condition.
The other 2 I have are uncleaned.
I have seen some that are in "like new" condition without the box listed for $150...
(dang... that sho' is expensive)
"Life is tough.... but it's tougher if you're stupid."....John Wayne
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
They didn't actually reintroduce the knife, they recycled the pattern number to a completely different knife. The pic below is the 1984 707UH.cody6268 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 2:41 pm I was just looking at the Schrade research section page, as I myself thought it only came with scissors. Apparently, in 1984, Schrade produced the first 707UH (with the pen blade) which was produced "in low numbers for two years only". Then, in 1991, it was reintroduced, but with scissors replacing the pen blade.
There were 97,873 106OTs made but the 707UH is only half that with 50,476 of them making it out of the factory.kootenay joe wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 3:33 pmQuote Mike: "As I understand it, the US made 106OTs were low number produced too.
- Jason
-
- Posts: 13373
- Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
- Location: West Kootenays, B.C.
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
Jason thank you for posting the production numbers. So actually there must still be quite a few 106OT and 707UH 'out there' even though they are not often seen.
kj
kj
- Meridian_Mike
- Posts: 4981
- Joined: Mon Apr 21, 2014 8:36 pm
- Location: Mississippi
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
X2...kootenay joe wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 8:15 pm Jason thank you for posting the production numbers. So actually there must still be quite a few 106OT and 707UH 'out there' even though they are not often seen.
kj
Thanks for those numbers!
"Life is tough.... but it's tougher if you're stupid."....John Wayne
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
Maybe that means people love them so much that they aren't selling them. I've got one of those (maybe even one of each) somewhere but I've never carried it. Maybe I'll dig it out and carry it for a few days to see what all the fuss is about.kootenay joe wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 8:15 pmSo actually there must still be quite a few 106OT and 707UH 'out there' even though they are not often seen.
- Jason
- garddogg56
- Bronze Tier
- Posts: 9023
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 2:18 am
- Location: Maine Aya up North
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
They do make great watch pocket carries along with tha 8uh
"On the Road Again"Willie Nelson
-
- Posts: 892
- Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:14 pm
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
Schrade also made a version without the shackle. Seems like anything went sometimes in that factory.
-
- Posts: 13373
- Joined: Mon Jan 11, 2016 5:36 pm
- Location: West Kootenays, B.C.
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
It looks like 2 of your 3 have scissors at the back and one has scissors in the front position ?
kj
kj
Re: Uncle Henry 707UH
Roland that's really funny, I never noticed that. Normally the nail mark on one of the blades on a two blade jack would be impossible or very difficult to reach if they were reversed, but I guess in this case it didn't matter which one was in front. I would think that it was a conscious decision to switch them at some point in the pattern's lifetime rather than a frequent willy-nilly switch as I'd imagine that the springs were different as well.
Eric
Eric