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Last edited by DaveN; 09-08-2011 at 08:24 PM.
Reason: add on
For all you members, $30(price subject to inflation) makes you a contributing member. I think this great site is worth it.
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09-08-2011 07:24 PM
# ADS
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Go to Carl Smith's site and you shall find all. BAyonet Collection Presentation Commonly known as the butcher bayonet. Yes, Geman. Maybe 98/05.
Last edited by browningautorifle; 09-08-2011 at 08:24 PM.
Regards, Jim
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J A Henckel made the bayonet
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Your bayonet is a German
S98/05 'butcher' that was commonly used in WW1. It is 'double maker' marked, once by the producer, once by the finisher/retailer.
The L/H ricasso shows the maker mark Act. Ges. (short for Actiengesellschaft) Vorm. over Frister & Rossman, Berlin - so read Frister & Rossman, maker.
On the R/H ricasso is stamped the 'twins' symbol of the maker J.A. Henkels Zwillingswerk of Solingen, who probably finished and retailed the end product.
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Thank you all very much. I had looked up bayonet makers(German
) and on what little I could read on the blade deduced Frister & Rossman but had not got to the 2nd part. Thanks again for the info. What is a good source for handles as the gentleman that has it and is either going to make his own or throw it away? He is as evidence of my pictures, partially got the blade done and does this as a hobby.
For all you members, $30(price subject to inflation) makes you a contributing member. I think this great site is worth it.
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You can get repro grips or buy a turkish cut down and use the ones from that as the 98/05 is worth more than the turked one
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As said above, the bayonet is an Imperial German
Sg98/05 bayonet. It appears to be a battlefield recovery and as such it had a unique collectability. Believe it or not, many WW1 collectors will pay a premium for dug or surface recovered items with bayonets being near the top of the list. Rifles and helmets are the two items that are above bayonets in desirability on the list of popular recovered items. That being said, the gentleman, by removing the brown oxidation and pitting, has taken this one from that field and turned it into a less than fair condition bayonet in the general bayonet collection area. This one was a good one since it was probably recovered only a few years after the War, say in the late 1920s or early 1930s. You can find a Turkish
cut down 98/05 and use the grips from it but do be aware that the grips are not always totally interchangeable and will require fitting but is fairly simple and easily done if required. The "Zweilingswerk" marking is scarce but not rare, it does make it slightly more desirable.
Last edited by gew8805; 09-09-2011 at 11:11 AM.
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Thank You to gew8805 For This Useful Post:
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Go to Carl Smith's site and you shall find all. [.
Wish it did contain all ;-) and the smith is from the fact that when i started all this many years ago I lived in an Sld Smithy - Black Smiths Shop, in a small Scottish village (converted to a house but the hearth was still in an outbuilding.) I took old smithy as a company and web name, and now many only know be as oldsmithy, keeps me anonomous lol
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g....5, thanks I just got your reply and told my friend and he said ....well ...What can I do now?
nothing but carry on with a restoration of a bayonet that was going to be put in the trash un till he picked it up for $5. But I learned a valuable lesson.
For all you members, $30(price subject to inflation) makes you a contributing member. I think this great site is worth it.
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Yup, somebody took a perfectly good dug up bayonet and proceeded to attack it with a grinder of some sort. Probably reducing it's value by upwards of 80% in the process. What is left of it would make a great bush/utility knife though, it IS good German
steel after all.
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