I came across this supplier that may have goods you guys might be interested in.
WWII Restoration Supplies
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...2838x688-1.jpg
http://www.questmasters.us/sitebuild...s2-838x688.jpg
HTH,
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I came across this supplier that may have goods you guys might be interested in.
WWII Restoration Supplies
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...2838x688-1.jpg
http://www.questmasters.us/sitebuild...s2-838x688.jpg
HTH,
I have a friend in NJ that builds dummy rifle grenades and also uses decals, hope he will see this post and show us his items.
Wooden boxes related to ordnance both original and made-up has a big following too.
Here is a pyrotechnic box from years ago.Attachment 102426Attachment 102427
RCS,
That's the first I've seen, really nice example.
I have mostly ammo crates, but have collected a few Vietnam era land mine crates and some misc others.
I have 1 Radio crate I need to photo. A GE with Ordnance stamp on it. Most all I found at estate/barn sales. 7 or 8 of my WWII era ammo boxes came from a barn sale. The ole farmer was a WWII Vet and saved them after they were repacked or used. He was using them for misc nuts and bolts, nails, screws and such. He said he'd sell me the contents for $5.00 each or contents plus box for $10.00. I sprayed them out with a de-greaser solution, lightly brushed them and they came out cleaner. But I'm running out of room and I rarely sell anything. So I use them as display and for storage.
I recently seen a WRA crate sell for ~$285 or so on auction. I posted about the WRA crate in the carbine forum in a 'M1A1 folder stock sold for..' thread but it was closed down because of insults and attitudes.
Talked with a Interior designer I knew from work who said she was constantly looking for these type items that they work into the design of homes and some commercial settings.
When I came upon the link above I thought about all the Artillery shells the guys have been researching/restoring.
I was hoping it would be handy. From what I read from the link it appears the guy covers a lot of items and different eras.
Cheers,
This tread remined me that I've always been interested in what the crates looked like that the pre-1930's Springfield 1903 and Enfield No1 MK3 looked like. On the single carry boxes, the ones that heald multiple rifles for shipping and storage.
Anyone have pictures of these they would like to share?
I'll look around as time allows.
Maybe worth contacting the link above to see if he has done any before.
Might also be worth posting a new topic in the 03 Enfield forums.
Charlie-P777
I tried to access the site referenced by the OP only to find a "site for sale" notice.
painter777's link below works just fine.. thanks!
Tom,
This gets you to their Restoration supplies:
WWII Restoration Supplies
This is their Home Page:
QuestMasters Online Museum Home Page
Baker,
Are you looking for something like these from member posts?
http://www.milsurps.com/showthread.php?t=56122
https://www.milsurps.com/showthread.php?t=66327
Baker.... Question for you,
Are you looking for Armory shipping crates that held 8-10 ?
Or just single rifle crates used to ship the rifle between 2 people ?
Found a picture of a Springfield Armory label that shows a letter code for the type rifles packed inside. These were packed as lots of 10.
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...68738JPG-1.jpg
This link to a single 03 shipping case:
The Finest Known Identified U.S. Springfield Model 1903 Bolt Action Rifle with Shipping Case Accesso
When looking in to crates your bound to come across Flat head screw and Phillips screw question.
Here is some information about Phillips screw head vs The Reed and Prince screw Debate.
The information below is from Reply 28 from the US Militaria Site. It's about a late Grenade case.
Link is below the bottom information.
The development of the Phillips style screw head was made prior to WWII, wide spread use was not integrated into military production until after WWII. The Frearson screw drive, also known as the Reed and Prince screw, is similar to a Phillips, but the Frearson has a more pointed 75° V shape. Most mis-identify the "X" screw head in 1940s military items as a Phillips, but it is actually a Reed and Prince.
WWII MKII Frag Crate with canisters - FIREARMS & ORDNANCE - U.S. Militaria Forum
Here a lot of 10, M1903 case from auction that gives outer measurements:
Wood Shipping Crate for Ten M1903 Rifles | Cowan's Auction House: The Midwest's Most Trusted Auction House / Antiques / Fine Art / Art Appraisals
Hoping this is a decent start.
Cheers,
This one is awesome looking. I can't believe how much they sell for.
Thanks for the links and info
---------- Post added at 04:30 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:27 PM ----------
[quote=painter777;458214]Are you looking for something like these from member posts?
Those are cool posts, lots of good info. I must have been doing a search wrong before because I didn't turn that one up. Thanks
I have been unable to find a photo or two in any manuals that show this rack. It will store carbines (lock bar for carbines not shown) and a lock bar for M1 rifles. Only M1 carbines and M1 rifles will fit. The drawing number would indicate WW2 ? and you could place one rack on top of the other as there are holes. It was used by a unit at some point in time.Attachment 102565Attachment 102564
OK Robert,
Your D#mn Rifle rack has drove me nuts since you posted the pictures. I think I looked at every picture on the internet and didn't find anything close to it.
Closes I've seen would be a toss up between the rack used on Gun Smoke, The Rifleman and The Andy Griffith show...... none are a match.
Then I typed in the D-7545-69 and hit a post in 'The Ask Each Other' forum on the CMP. Guy there back in 2015 posted what looks like 3 picture negatives, followed by a picture that no longer comes up.
Maybe you know the poster, I can ask him and give him a link to this post, here's the link:
D-7545-69 carbine rifle rack - CMP Forums
Then for the heck of it I typed in the CO.E-351 and found a link to a Engineers unit.
In the only link I found there is a time line of their travels:
Co. E 351st Engineers - Introduce Yourself - VI CORPS COMBAT ENGINEERS WWII
I'll PM the guy on the CMP and see if he's seen your Rifle rack before.
Charlie-P777
Edit to Add: I've sent a PM to 7,62x51mm at the CMP
Charlie, I am the CMP 7,62x51mm, the three photo negatives are not mine. I was never able to find out any additional information as the carbine and rifle
racks are well made there must have been plans and there is a drawing number. Robert