Here is
how I do dovetailed bolsters with spacers. After
the blade has been profiled, drilled, ground, heat
treated, and polished (whew!), clamp a piece of
bolster material to one side. It is helpful to
scribe right on the bolster which side it is for,
and which end goes forward.

Make sure
the edges line up, and the ends will be where you
want them.

Drill the
first hole.

Immediately
put a temporary pin through the bolster and blade.
Shift the clamp so you can drill the second hole,
again checking the alignment.

Set the
first bolster aside, and repeat the process for
the other side. When you have both bolsters drilled,
pin them together and hold them in a hand vise
or a pair of vise grips to allow you to hold them
while you grind the leading ends.

Go through
all the grits, and finish with a buffer, since
you will not be able to go back and finish this
part once the bolsters are attached to the blade.

Remove
the pieces from the hand vise, and with them still
pinned together, grind the ends even. The table
on the disk sander should be set at right angles
to the disk.

Now you
can remove the pins. Reset the table on your disk
grinder to the angle you want for your dovetail.
Being very careful to remember which side is which,
grind the chamfer on the inside of each bolster,
taking off small amounts. Pin them back together
to check for symmetry and evenness. NOTE: Do not
change the angle on your grinder table until you
are through making this knife.

When you
have them perfectly even, pin them to the knife
blade.

Peen the
pins well to spread them out.

I usually
follow this by roughly grinding the bolters to
shape, since they get quite hot in this operation.
If you already had handles attached, it could weaken
the glue joint or scorch the handle material. Note
that I tape the blade to protect it during all
the remaining operations. A hand rubbed or mirror
finish is easily nicked or scratched around a grinder.

The
next step is to pre-glue the liners and the scales.
This means that you will only be handling one piece
per side instead of two, which greatly simplifies
assembly and gluing. Select the scale material
you want to use (in this case, I used stabilized
Osage Orange), and make sure that it is dead flat.
Cut a piece of spacer material of the proper size
to cover it, and epoxy them together. I use a weighted
board to “clamp” the parts together on the flat
surface of the workbench. Be sure to put some waxed
paper underneath so the assembly doesn’t get glued
to the bench.
It’s
time for the liners and spacers.

This
is a sheet of .035” nickel silver, and a sheet of
the vulcanized fiber material commonly used for
liners in knifemaking. I cut a strip of each (carefully,
so as not to bend or deform the nickel silver),
and scuff up the surface of the metal with fine
sandpaper. I wipe down both surfaces with acetone,
and then use epoxy to make a nickel silver sandwich
with red “bread.” It winds up looking like this.

This sandwich
is cut up into strips to fit between the bolster
and the handle material. I find it easiest to handle
if you chamfer the end on the grinder (same angle
as the bolsters) before you cut it to size. Your
handle slabs are also chamfered at the same angle
on the grinder, but you are effectively grinding
the outside this time; just the reverse of what
you did on the bolsters. With the knife securely
held in a vise, glue up one side: bolster to spacer,
and spacer to scale. Make sure all the parts are
in alignment and fitting tightly. Let it cure.

With the
knife securely held in a vise, glue up one side:
bolster to spacer, and spacer to scale. Make sure
all the parts are in alignment and fitting tightly.
You will note that, in this case, I have added
red pigment to the epoxy. This will help to make
certain that no glue lines appear in the finished
knife. Let it cure. Next day, you can drill through
the attached scale using the holes in the tang
for a drill guide. Repeat the gluing job on side
two, and let it cure.

Saw off
the excess scale material on the band saw.

You can
then drill this side through from the side already
drilled. Epoxy in your pins, and let cure again.
This is a good time to rough out the handle, getting
the sides flat and the scale material approximately
flush with the tang.

You can
then drill the new side through from the side already
drilled.

With
both scales drilled through, cut the pins to length,
and notch them about halfway along the length.
This “step” will give the epoxy something to grab
when you glue them in place, and make sure that
they stay put.

Epoxy in
your pins, and let cure again. You can now start
finishing out the handle shape, and when you get
to this point, you will either be very pleased,
or wretched if something slipped out of alignment.
This is
the way that has evolved for me after much experimentation
and lost sleep. I believe it will work for you
too.
The finished
product:

.