doglegg wrote:JohnR, I like that little whittler. What are the handles, they look good.![]()
Thank you all for the comments, doglegg they are bone, 804's have come in a variety of handle materials and colors over the years.

doglegg wrote:JohnR, I like that little whittler. What are the handles, they look good.![]()

Very good pick up on those two. Love the scales. Beautiful.koldgold wrote:This pair of Whittlers have nice bone scales. Ken
That whittler set has delrin scales not bone.koldgold wrote:This pair of Whittlers have nice bone scales. Ken

Ah, that's what that shield goes to. I've seen several of them in lots of Schrade parts. Most of the Asten Felts knives I see are Folding Hunters; both Schrade and Kabar. I guess chosen because the large size made it good for cutting the dryer felts.orvet wrote:I picked this one up Memorial Day weekend at an antique store. It is a new in the box 194OT with the shield from Asten, a company that made felts for the paper industry. According to what I found for online history, this company started about 1890 in Belgium and then later started a manufacturing plant in Philadelphia about 1931.
When you Google Asten mostly what you find are knives, primarily Schrade, that have the Asten name on the shield. Apparently like a lot of other companies that produced felts for the paper industry, they also gave away a lot of knives!
One of the unique things about the Delrin on this knife is that it is much darker in color than the Delrin on most Old Timers.
Pardon the lousy indoor pictures, the shield is really quite shiny and it makes it difficult to photograph.
Schrade 194OT Asten e.jpg
Schrade USA Asten a.jpg
I wouldn't bet on those being bone scales. They're the same as on the Schrade 206 I had Heman re-handle a set of those and mine sure weren't bone.koldgold wrote:This pair of Whittlers have nice bone scales. Ken



A good find Ann. I think you will like how dandy that pattern really is, and the blades look to be nearly full. The handles are delrin so that would put it from the early 1960's to no later than 1973.zoogirl wrote:I got this one out at the antique show today. As you can see, it’s a 834 Schrade Walden. I think the scales are bone but I wouldn’t swear it.
My new little friend kicked my Coast out of my purse as soon as we got home!determined little thing! Well, the Coast was a bit on the small side anyway. It seems I have a new EDC.
There are actually splits on the centre pin, both sides, but it feels pretty solid. I like it because it’s now the closest to my first, lost and lamented, knife. 86A19621-B805-487B-9372-A0C6B8B87B2B.jpegA5851064-35C7-4C14-BE45-0EF3EDCB4609.jpeg49AFB995-09F4-4B78-8A47-74DD81B92E91.jpeg




I'm always looking for ANY wire handled knife (not so much the scout mess kit knives) and now you have given me another variation to hunt down. Thank you, I think.cody6268 wrote:Great score! I've been looking for one to add to my hawkbill collection. It looks to be in really good shape. There was a run of them with copper-beryllium blades (to prevent sparking; as I believe these were made for an explosives company) that you might want to look out for. There were very, very few of those made.
It's a really interesting concept, with the handle being pretty much all the structural and mechanical parts; which makes me wonder why no one's doing anything exactly like it today?

Meridian_Mike wrote:I got this guy yesterday....
It is an Old Timer shield Master Mechanic (MM108)... same knife as the 108 OT.
I did a little research yesterday on the Master Mechanic knives.... It seems that Camillus made some of the Master Mechanic knives too.
My collecting interest (right now....LOL) is the MM knives with the Old Timer shields. Do y'all have any insight on the Schrade vs Camillus MM knives?
Who made the MM knives with the Master Mechanic shield? (both maybe?)
MM108 Master Mechanic.jpg
Mike
I now have the MM89 and the MM108 with an Old Timer shield.....
(I'm sure there are others....LOL)
Not a bad looking knife Cal.tongueriver wrote:I have been looking for one of these for several years. I have another one that is not completely original but ok, I guess until I found this minty perfect one. It is a transition 49r knife in the new 497 pattern, introduced in the transition year 1973. For a few hours or days, but probably not weeks, these came out with the old Schrade Walden 147 tang stamp. I love the pattern and this one just tickles me.trans1.jpgtrans4.jpgtrans5.jpgtrans6.jpg