Bill Hubbell
KNIFE MAKER
So many ways things can foul up, huh?! Even when you do everything right. Reminds me of the action of a bi-metallic strip, as in the old fan controls on furnaces, or in house thermostats, or even even the old flat coils in the automatic choke on your carbureted car (anyone remember those?)
They relied on the different expansion rates of the two metals to cause a curving motion. So anyway, it seems that either the G-10 expanded or the wooden scales shrank. But, why? i would have expected the opposite- for maybe the wood (even though its stabilzed) to absorb some solvent from the epoxy and then expand, but if anything it shrank (or the G-10 expanded).
I've never had that happen. But I too, glue up the liners, scales, and tang all at once. But, if that's what's keeping mine straight, then why didn't the angle iron you clamped to keep yours straight. This is smoking my pea-brain.
They relied on the different expansion rates of the two metals to cause a curving motion. So anyway, it seems that either the G-10 expanded or the wooden scales shrank. But, why? i would have expected the opposite- for maybe the wood (even though its stabilzed) to absorb some solvent from the epoxy and then expand, but if anything it shrank (or the G-10 expanded).
I've never had that happen. But I too, glue up the liners, scales, and tang all at once. But, if that's what's keeping mine straight, then why didn't the angle iron you clamped to keep yours straight. This is smoking my pea-brain.