A company, even a division of one with no revenue stream, is on life support. Only a fool of a businessman would continue that indefinitely. If they do not get a buyer they will NOT continue to maintain customer service indefinitely. My guess is they are trying to sell Knight for someone else to restart....once they give up that effort they will fold it (think GM and Saturn).
I wouldn't say NO revenue stream, but yeah! They are selling parts and accessories. I agree that they are hoping for a buyer. And it is no secret, at least not to me that they have a 2 year contract to supply parts, accessories, and perform warranty service. That contract started around the end of June or first part of July, 2009.
Knight had a good run for a lot of years, sold lots of quality rifles until PRADCO/EBSCO got ahold of them. Poor decisions, bad engineering and design were their biggest problems. They didn't wake up until it was too late.
They were in business for 24-25 years. The inline muzzleloading market has pretty well been saturated. Only new innovative models will make it at this point. Instead of spending the time to make one or two excellent models, or improving on their proven models, they tried introducing about 8 half baked models in the last few years. They hung on to that FPJ WAY to long as well. That IMO, was the beginning of the end, the failed rifles just added more fuel to the fire.
Corporations like EBSCO lose touch with the thing that matters most, the customer.
My $.02 worth