An authentic one doesn't have a cap bolster. And this one isn't even Case bone. Seller's knife never saw the inside of a Case factory. And as of now it's up to $300 with 25 bids.

Ken
Not all sellers from Tennessee are unscrupulous fake knife peddling so and so’s.....but it sure does seem that way and I am from Tennessee. It really saddens me.TwoFlowersLuggage wrote:And it fits my theory that most of these seem to come from sellers in Tennessee. When an ad for a fake says "no returns, no refunds", I call "shenanigans!" on that seller.
Just Bob your comment is right on what a wastejust bob wrote:My theory is that there is a central hub for some of this counterfeit knife activity. Those parts are not easy to find, although if you know the right people no doubt they are out there. A guy from Florida told me he turned down the chance to buy 500 Case counterfeit blades. That is a lot of blades and no doubt they ended up being sold to one person that meted them out. Then the ability to put a knife together in an acceptable, quality like manner isn't available in every zip code. Many, many people can put a knife together. I know a dozen locally, but very few people have the shop equipment to turn out quality work. You can take a file and shave down a spring, but if you have a milling machine you can shave down a spring to a uniform few thousands tolerance. While some fakes are very obvious.A close look at some of these counterfeit knives shows that they aren't being put together under shade trees on a picnic bench. The sad fact is that the few that have the ability to do this kind of quality fake work are ruining the hobby and their time could be spent much better if they were doing legitimate knife repair or building. I can't believe the motive for profit is the driving force, they could make just as much money or more doing more ethical labor. Sad state of affairs.
Oh, don't misunderstand me! I was not generalizing about sellers from the Volunteer State. A criminal gang that is based in Tennessee does not mean everyone in Tennessee is a criminal! I just find it curious. I'm wondering if it could be something like a group of "Irish Travellers" - aren't they pretty active around Tennessee?Landersknives wrote:Not all sellers from Tennessee are unscrupulous fake knife peddling so and so’s.....but it sure does seem that way and I am from Tennessee. It really saddens me.TwoFlowersLuggage wrote:And it fits my theory that most of these seem to come from sellers in Tennessee. When an ad for a fake says "no returns, no refunds", I call "shenanigans!" on that seller.
Toyodajeff wrote:Why would somebody put in a fake bid?