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  1. #1
    Legacy Member bros's Avatar
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    Long Branch T transit chest

    I recently acquired a 1945 Long Branch T....in the chest and all matching.
    It's a real beauty you'd swear it rolled out of the factory yesterday!!!
    Question I have is regarding the chest. There is written on the chest in black marker, "ACME" and then it appears to be a couple of letters followed by a number, underneath that is "TORONTO" and then another word which I can't make out what it is.
    I spoke with another fellow collector who said it most likely was a the name of a dealership that had acquired them when they went surplus on the market.
    Any thoughts out there?
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    Contributing Member CINDERS's Avatar
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    Sorry but cannot help myself but ACME to me conjures visions of Wiley E Coyote & the Roadrunner as he kept that company afloat with all his doings guess the next step was a sniper rifle!

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    Years ago in Canadaicon there was a company called Acme Novelties and they sold surplus and off brand merchandise . I do not remember what they had for firearms but I sure did want a Bronco motorbike that they had at the time.
    This is when the Army&Navy stores had pallets of jungle carbines for $14.95and No 4 T's sold for $149.99 in the chest.

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    it is interesting the 10x price difference.

    From my minimal knowledge it seems like there might only be an 8x (give or take) difference over here at the moment. That being said I'm only going off internet asking prices which seem high on the normal rifles.
    Last edited by henry r; 09-05-2017 at 07:09 AM.

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    Bros, I don't know the answer to your question, but I strongly suspect your guess will turn out to be correct.

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    Acme Surplus Toronto.

    Army and Navy sold No.4's for $9.95 and Jungle carbines for $24.95
    98 K Mausers were $29.95
    Sporterized SMLE's were $15.95 and went on sale once a month for $12.96
    Never saw any No.4 T's at the A & N and I was in charge of rifle sales from 1958 to mid 60's
    Edmonton Tire had No.4T's at $99.95 later $125.00, as did WW Arcade
    Cannot remember what I had for breakfast but the prices stuck with me... : -)##

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    Legacy Member bros's Avatar
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    Thread Starter
    Thanks for the info fellows!!
    If we only knew how the prices would escalate, we all probably would have bought a truck-load!! Although relatively speaking...my father talked about making 60cents/hour in the late fifties, one would still have to question "if it's a deal" for even a sporterized SMLE on special at $12.96.

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    Legacy Member bros's Avatar
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    Thread Starter
    Quote Originally Posted by Warren View Post
    Acme Surplus Toronto.

    Army and Navy sold No.4's for $9.95 and Jungle carbines for $24.95
    98 K Mausers were $29.95
    Sporterized SMLE's were $15.95 and went on sale once a month for $12.96
    Never saw any No.4 T's at the A & N and I was in charge of rifle sales from 1958 to mid 60's
    Edmonton Tire had No.4T's at $99.95 later $125.00, as did WW Arcade
    Cannot remember what I had for breakfast but the prices stuck with me... : -)##
    Can one imagine winding the clock back to the days Warren speaks of, when so many different shops were selling off surplus firearms.....when people didn't look at you like you were growing horns out of your head just because you might be interested in firearms. When one could walk into a shop where the rifles were so abundant and the shelf space was so limited that they were jamming Enfields into pickle or whiskey barrels. I remember as a young boy going shopping with my Mother at the local mall on Friday evenings and I would slip away from her sight and go and look at those barrels full of Enfields at Simpson Sears, yes that was in the local shopping mall!!!! In our so called liberated, modern, progressive age firearms are looked at as evil murdering devices that our governments want to control to the point death by bureaucratic strangulation because they feel they do not have total control untill we the citizenry are totally unarmed. Yet on the other hand freedom is expressed in totally new ways....we celebrate in our streets and promote in public education a mindset that didn't exist when I was younger. I am talking about social engineering!!!!
    An example here in Canadaicon of bureaucratic strangulation is when are classes of firearms where ownership is grandfathered to those who had possession before a certain date and after that deadline has passed the class is closed to new potential owners. When the grandfathered owners pass on.... so will all those classes firearms ( full autos, converted autos and short barreled handguns). Your once expensive investment will be reduced to a pool of molten metal at the local steel mill. I feel especially for our friends in Englandicon and Australiaicon where government attacks on private gun ownership seemed but all to have killed the industry. It is proven time and time again that legal gun owners are the most law abiding citizens, but sadly we are seen as an evil threat to the very people we elect to govern us, what a oxymoron!!!!
    Sorry I know I am a bit off topic but I'm having a few cold ones and felt the need for a good rant!!!!

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    In about 1999 Tony Hallam of Charnwood Ordnance offered me 30 L42's, boxed, for 500 pounds apiece. What kind of idiot would have turned down that deal? You guessed......me! At the price they're now fetching I would have netted a quarter of a million.

    Hindsight has 20/20 vision.

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    Think of what $15,000 pound was worth then Roger if you equated it out against the wage of the day that is a heck of allot of cash to sit on for 18 years then having to flog them off at $8,350 pounds/unit =$250,500GBP I dare say at that price you would have no trouble shifting them given what the current asking price for an L42 is but whether they are getting it is another question.

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