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Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
Not sure if it's tin plated or stainless.
You could test with a magnet. Although there are some grades of magnetic stainless steel if it's non magnetic you'll know that it's stainless. Obviously tin plated is magnetic.
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03-11-2025 04:23 PM
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Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
Would electrolysis work if I filled the interior with the liquid
In theory it would work if you suspended the anode inside, in the liquid, inside the shell.
Some people put a lightbulb in the circuit so that if the electrodes short-circuit no harm is done and all that happens is the bulb lights up. Personally I don't bother with a lightbulb in the electrolysis circuit.
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P.E. & M CO" = Poole Engineering & Machine Company Baltimore, Maryland.

Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
It survived firing in pretty decent shape.
Yes, the 75 is good shape.
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Follow up on the fork and the magnet. It's non-magnetic so an unmarked stainless. It had a rust stain on it but probably from something else. It came off pretty easily. So by all appearances, it's a postwar fork but an early one. It will work with my Korean and Vietnam mess kits.
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Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
You'd think if they wanted to change the color of fabric, they'd die it rather than paint it with something that's going to come off.
Lots of times Blanco or Webbo was the result of an RSM's orders for his own tastes. Then there were the ones that wanted you to paint your bayonet scabbards...or use shoe polish to have them shining black... It wasn't the army in general.
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Aragorn, I took a ton of Pattern 37 web gear to the gun show in Fort Worth last weekend and only sold a well used post war Fairburn Sykes fighting knife, a N.O.S. Browning HP holster, a NOS canteen in a skeleton carrier, and a stereoscopic magnifying glass for map reading. A NOS large pack for $15 almost sold until I told the buyer the small pack was more popular among reenactors. I'm too honest sometimes.
The Vietnam War gear sold a lot better...waaay better, in fact it made up about 95% of my gross sales. I put my Fulton Regulated No.1 Mk III and my near mint civilian target M.L.E. on the table with high, but fair? prices hoping they would create some traffic. They did, but not many Brit kit buyers.
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I've noticed that about the Vietnam stuff. That's who's still alive and trying to get their stuff back. I'm actually buying Desert Storm stuff when I didn't really want it until kind of recently. This same surplus store had the same huge box filled with Vietnam butt packs the last time I was there. None left. I expect these British
ones will be there a while because there's no straps and without straps, you can't really use them.
I didn't even go out today. Beautiful weather but it's pretty cold. The flea markets don't open till next month.
Instead, I ordered my next free Cabela's pistol today. A Dreyse. As usual, price is higher than the market, but I got them down 10% and had plenty of points to cover it. I only have limited information on it at this point but it's looking like a late first variant nonmilitary marked, early 1916 production. Has Imperial proofs but no acceptance mark. Looks like the finish has all turned to patina but there is very little to no pitting on it that I can see. Most examples I've seen on the net seem to have extensive pitting for some reason. Probably be two weeks before I have it. Not local.
Last edited by Aragorn243; 03-23-2025 at 04:04 PM.
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