Since there appears to be an interest in these things, I pulled some out for pics. Many have not seen the light of day in many, many years. I chose ones that although they are not extremely rare, they are unusual for one reason or another.
FN49 Bayonets. I have no idea why I kept so many FN49 bayos, other than the fact they are extremely well made and these examples range from excellent to mint condition. Top row is Belgian contract, Luxembourg contract and 3 Eqyptian contract. The bottom is the most interesting, a Venezuelan contract FN49 bayo. It is identical to a standard FN M1924 export bayo, except for a larger muzzle ring on account of the Vennie FN49 compensator. A most imposing bayonet on the end of an FN49 !!!!
S84/98 Bayonets for K98k. Yugo, Russian capture, Israeli and other refurbs are available but the top two were the best condition K98 bayos I was able to find, original, matching and unissued (cof41 and asw43). The bottom is a late war asw44 with riveted grips. Although it is a well made bayonet it shows the degradation in finish, with rough grinding marks, compared with the earlier high standard.
Various bayonets that I found interesting.
Top left. Finnish M1962 for the Valmet rifles. Probably the sharpest and most functional bayonet I have ever handled.
Top Right. Early enfield No. 4 Mk I with cruciform blade, very well made and light compared with later Mk II/II*/III variants.
M1941 Johnson bayonet.
Norwegian Krag M1894 converted post war to fit the US M1 Carbine by the addition of a muzzle ring and US style belt hanger.
German S84/98 converted by the Norwegians post war to fit the US M1 Garand by the addition of a gas plug stud and US belt hanger.
Bottom. Japanese Arisaka Type 30 Bayo. Late war last ditch production with un-fullered blade, straight crossguard, square pommel, riveted grips and a wooden scabbard bound with twine. Still has most of the original jungle green paint.
Hope you enjoy.