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Interesting that the Germans used a belted/flanged case for the 13 X 64. Belted cases were originally designed to cure head-spacing issues with tapered cartridges and narrow shoulders of the likes of the .375 H&H Magnum. Later, belted cases became de rigeur for sales in North America where many thought 'belted magnum' was one word. Perhaps they felt the shoulder on the 13mm was insufficient to guarantee reliable head-spacing?
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05-14-2025 07:33 AM
# ADS
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With the saw, you may want to examine the bearings, which the old saws have. I had one handed down to me that had the bearings shot and it wasn't cutting accurate. You have to examine it, can't figure out why your work won't turn out? That's why they get given away...
Here's the reprints of the circulars on these tools... http://vintagemachinery.org/mfgindex...x?id=101&tab=3
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It looks like an OD3 shovel case, a bit dirty but still...
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The circular saw is shown in a catalog I located with Jim's link. Price and specs are there that match your model number. - Bob
http://vintagemachinery.org/pubs/detail.aspx?id=31965
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That was an expensive saw, $89.50 in 1964. I'm using a Milwauki saw today that new runs $149. Prior to the massive inflation they were $120. In today's dollars that's $909.02.
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