New scales for my Swiss Army Knife

One of the scales on my Victorinox Camper Swiss Army knife had come loose so I bought some replacements from eBay and went for an upgrade. The new scales do not have the Camper logo but do have a slot for a pen and they came with a new set of tools, toothpick, tweezers, pin and pen. There was a choice of colours but after thinking about it I chose the classic red.

After watching a few YouTube videos I bought a desk clamp from Amazon to apply even pressure to fix the scales.

I removed the scale tools and the old scales easily popped off.

Victorinox Swiss Champ​
Removing the old scales using a Victorinox Swiss Champ
Victorinox Camper knife
No scales before cleaning

Once the scales were removed I took the opportunity to throughly clean the knife with soapy water and a washing up sponge and then oiled all the blade joints with some WD-40 applied with a cocktail stick so the knife was not soaked in oil. (I regularly use the large blade for cooking and I do not want excess WD-40 in my food.)

SAK no scales and serviced
No scales, cleaned and oiled

To help to fix the new scales I soaked them in hot water to soften them slightly. After a couple of minutes in the water I dried them with kitchen towel and then assembled the knife and scales in the wooden vice. Ensuring everything lined up under light pressure in the vice.

Wooden vice Swiss Army knife

The vice worked perfectly – the pressure was applied evenly and both scales popped on securely. A bit of extra pressure closed all the gaps between the scales and the knife body.

New scales Victorinox Camper knife wi th a pin, pen​ and screwdriver in the corkscrew
New scales

A quick check that the new scales were fitted correctly, a polish and fitting the removable tools, including a mini screwdriver in the corkscrew and the job was finished.

Upgraded Victorinox Camper knife with a pin, pen​ and screwdriver in the corkscrew
Upgraded Victorinox Camper knife with a pin, pen and screwdriver in the corkscrew

Top tip – use this type of vice – the wooden jaws do not damage the scales and the pressure is applied evenly when attaching the scales.

Click on the images for a larger version.