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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
MrBaxter
Turnbuckles are getting tricky.
Not cheap but readily available - they became a standard part used on a land Rover, they are the Land Rover series I, series IIA & series III "Seat Box Lid Hasp". Going from memory the Land Rover part number is 334525.
Edit - yes it is.
Available here at GBP £10 inc tax.
Land Rover Direct original parts
334525 | Turn Buckle - Land Rover Part 334525
Another Land Rover parts supplier who has them in stock
Turnbuckle (FF012487) for Land Rover Series IIA/III
Last edited by Alan de Enfield; 01-04-2022 at 05:55 PM.
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
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01-04-2022 05:45 PM
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
MrBaxter
We have thousands of correct to era vintage
British
screws on the shelf. I bought out a lot from an old stockist a while back.
It's worth buying the old fashioned slotted wood screws when you see them if the price is right. When a local ironmongers was having a "closing down sale" 10 to 15 years ago no-one seemed to want the slotted wood screws and so I was able to purchase virtually the entire remaining stock of old fashioned wood screws at a very good price.
When a "vintage type item" that should really have "slotted type" wood screws fitted has been fitted with "Pozi/Philips" head wood screws, it is remarkable how quickly some people point out the fact, often in a very irritating manner.
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I'd like to get one for my T but if it cost me $70/USD just to get Lances book here to Western Australia
(Still in transit) it would probably cost me $600/USD postage with a transit chest!
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
CINDERS
it would probably cost me $600/USD postage with a transit chest!
But why not have a go at making your own chest and then it's just the cost of materials plus your time. The engineering drawings are available on this forum and really it's a case of working from them slowly and carefully. For a Vickers chest that I extensively repaired, I concluded that pine was good enough from my local DIY store. Although I don't actually own a deactivated Vickers the chest is a collector's item in it's own right, especially being for a Vickers and that's why I saved and restored it.
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Advisory Panel
Nice lookin' chests Warren...
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Can I please ask how the stores label is attached to the chest? Is it by screws or nails?
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Legacy Member
The original metal stores labels were held on with the same sort of tacks that the felt was tacked on with.
---------- Post added at 05:51 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:47 PM ----------
The current Land Rover stock is OK but would not pass close inspection compared to originals. They are made in China using cheaper materials and processes and lack that good old fashioned robustness.
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Has other good things as well: Sniper Rifles Equipment
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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