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  1. #1
    Legacy Member enfield303t's Avatar
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    Faking Anyting

    Well everytime I see people building a reproduction (fake) anything I must say it really bothers me.

    No one I believe that posts on this site is in the business of building a fake anything for profit. I honestly believe that they want to build because like many sometimes can't afford the real thing or it really is almost impossible to find.

    Today we have no control over what happens to the object one it leaves the hands of the original builder. Built to a purpose but what if the second or third owner sells it as a original to a newbie.. I always consider myself to be a newbie.

    The bonus of this site is the availability of experts to help one with a purchase or personal friends that are well versed in what I want to buy.

    The unfortunte thing is the experts and knowledgeable on this site are not available at gun shows, and we all know what happens when we think we have found a good deal on and must act quickly.

    If I could haul the knowledgeable with me to every show I would feel much better. We have heard people post that they have seen a fake at a show or somewhere and where did it end up and how was it sold..real or fake?

    Just my opinion and I am sure many of you will disagree but that is ok with me. Today the marketing of fake everything is proliferating the world, scopes, guns, paintings, you name it and it makes me very cautious and very worried.

    Maybe I just worry too much?
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    A Collector's View - The SMLE Short Magazine Lee Enfield 1903-1989. It is 300 8.5x11 inch pages with 1,000+ photo’s, most in color, and each book is serial-numbered.  Covering the SMLE from 1903 to the end of production in India in 1989 it looks at how each model differs and manufacturer differences from a collecting point of view along with the major accessories that could be attached to the rifle. For the record this is not a moneymaker, I hope just to break even, eventually, at $80/book plus shipping.  In the USA shipping is $5.00 for media mail.  I will accept PayPal, Zelle, MO and good old checks (and cash if you want to stop by for a tour!).  CLICK BANNER to send me a PM for International pricing and shipping. Manufacturer of various vintage rifle scopes for the 1903 such as our M73G4 (reproduction of the Weaver 330C) and Malcolm 8X Gen II (Unertl reproduction). Several of our scopes are used in the CMP Vintage Sniper competition on top of 1903 rifles. Brian Dick ... BDL Ltd. - Specializing in British and Commonwealth weapons Specializing in premium ammunition and reloading components. Your source for the finest in High Power Competition Gear. Here at T-bones Shipwrighting we specialise in vintage service rifle: re-barrelling, bedding, repairs, modifications and accurizing. We also provide importation services for firearms, parts and weapons, for both private or commercial businesses.
     

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    Legacy Member xa-coupe's Avatar
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    My view is there is no problem if the repro/fake is sold as such. Where we have issues is where someone a) tries to deceive people or worse, some poor soul got taken and unknowingly tries to on sell it.
    I am a newbie too but I reckon I could spot a fake because I have spent a lot of time reading the forum.
    As soon as I have some time I will start my no4t and l42 repros. Repros because I value my gonads

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  6. #3
    Legacy Member enfield303t's Avatar
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    Well that is my point, you are going to build one and after if leaves your hands what is going to happen. It is doubtful that the majority of people can guarantee that they can spot a reproduction (fake) every time. Over the years I have seen some of the best fooled by reproductions of various things and I do believe it can happen just as easily with firearms.

    Personally I have three Sheriff's Badges from the frontier days in the USAicon. They are real but to me are fakes, why because although there were made on the original dies they were actually made in the 1950's. I believe it would be impossible to tell them from the originals because of how they were made, but I still consider them fakes. The man I purchased them from told me he would defy anyone telling him they were not original and could easily have sold them as such.

    MP (RCMP) marked rifles are out there that are believe to have been maked by a set of stamps that were sold years ago. Seeing as the records of MP rifles is not complete what is real and what is a fake. Certain numbers are recorded but not all were recorded so tell me how to distinguish the unlisted from being real of fake.

    As before, maybe I just worry too much?

    IMHO you can almost guarantee that somewhere down the line someone is going to pay too much for a item that they believe to be real but was a reproduction.

    Anyone want to buy some "real" Sheriff's badges?
    Last edited by enfield303t; 11-25-2010 at 01:54 AM.
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    Legacy Member xa-coupe's Avatar
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    You do worry too much

    I won't be stamping a T on it or S51 but i will use repro parts and from a glance it will look legit. Anyone that won't be able to tell it's not legit shouldn't be buying one a they havent done any homework.

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    I think you just need to really watch out. I see plenty of put together rifles that are done nicely, and a lot that are not. It is very difficult to build a superb fake rifle that would fool experts. I suppose some of the fakes that may be "worthwhile" to put together are the rarer snipers, but even those I doubt serve anyone financial gain as the parts themselves can be sold for more separately, than they can in a cobbled rifle. The scopes, mounts brackets, timber and small parts can be sold fairly freely around the world to the highest bidder, unlike the complete piece.
    If someone is green enough to pay thousands for a No4 T look-a-like with cheekpiece and a cheap commercial scope then who's fault is that?
    I like rebuilding rifles, and putting together rifles that are as close to original as I can make them. If and when I sell them I am perfectly honest about what they are, and what I've done. If they get passed on and lies get told, or miscommunication occurs then too bad.
    I put all mine together to shoot, make use of salvaged parts, and for fun. There will always be profiteers and scumbags, but that's their problem.
    Just my two cents.

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    Legacy Member bearhunter's Avatar
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    xa-coupe I know where enfield303T is coming from. He has an Indian No4 MkI T. There were many that called it a fake. I know, because I owned it at one time. Indian No4 T rifles have virtually no written provenance. It took me a long time to get that rifle verified by people that knew them, including an east Indian cabbie I met in Vancouver. He told me about the No4 Ts they had in India Yada yada. I was finally satisfied enough to let him have it but it took more than 5 years to be comfortable with it. Now, he's had verification by others that he trusts as well.
    No matter what, it's a crap game.
    I picked up a Garand M1icon D last year. I showed pictures here but of course it didn't have CMPicon provenance papers and it had serial numbers stamped on the wood as well. There were pictures of the rifle, kindly posted for me on this site. The rifle just looked to good to be a fake. Luckily, I ran into a fellow at the Salmon Arm show that recognised it. He identified it as Norwegianicon. It seems, the Norwegians are anal about stamping matching numbers into every part. I have a few Norwegian rifles and I also remember seeing some Norwegian built 1911 pistols. All of them, were coverd with matching numbers on every part. So, I now believe the M1-D is real but never used in US service but Norwegian. Doing a search, proves the Norwegians purchased quite a few Garand M1Ds.

    It would be nice to be able to peg every firearm or accessory by going to a book or on the internet. We all know that just can't happen. Sometimes, we just have to go on faith.
    Last edited by bearhunter; 11-25-2010 at 04:27 AM.

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  12. #7
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    From Maintenance to Forgery - a gray scale?

    The only answer is knowledge. There is a sliding scale from maintenance through refurbishment, repair, restoratation, remarking to downright faking and fraud.

    I think I can (at least to my satisfaction) show one clear yes/no border.

    If you refinish (because badly rusted) a barrel band on a K98kicon or replace it by an original part, that is quite OK, as it is merely doing what an armorer would have done years ago - maintaining the rifle's function. If the replacement part has a different number , so what. Armorers are there to keep the equipment functioning, not to play numbers games for collectors. Ask Peter Laidlericon on the Enfield Forum if you don't believe me.

    If you now stamp a number on that part, to match the rest of the rifle, then that is faking. And if you stamp a WaA marking on it, which in origin was a quality control mark, then that is downright forgery. The penalties in the days when those rifles were made were severe.

    So I am staggered to see that in the USAicon one can apparently purchase stamps for just about everything, even American arsenal stamps. And from what I have already written, it must be clear that

    THERE IS NO LEGITIMATE USE FOR SUCH STAMPS.

    Now consider the following:
    1) In the USA one can purchase stamps for remarking German (and other) military rifles.
    2) And in the USA there appear to be arsenal-fresh K98k's available in noticeable quantities, with all-matching parts numbering.

    3) In Germany such stamps are not on offer.
    4) And there are no noticeable quantities of arsenal-fresh K98k's available with all-matching parts numbering.

    Draw your own conclusions. And the answer is - better knowledge, to raise the threshold for fakers and forgers so that it becomes uneconomic.

    Uneconomic - that is the clue, because the forgery is NOT about "restoring it to its original condition" it is about fraudulently increasing the value - it is about MONEY.

    And collectors and plain ignorant suckers who have more money than expertise can largely blame themselves for feeding the market for forgeries.

    This is, of course, merely my opinion. Comments welcomed!

    Patrick

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    A really big problem is that, what with all the faking going on these days, the guy with a super-nice completely original rifle is at risk of being branded a crook when he goes to sell it.

    An example: I have a Kar 98k. It's a dou 45, it has had less than 300 rounds through it since I took the grease out of it and it is a darned nice rifle. Right now, these seem to be going, around here, for $1,000 and even higher. I paid $39.95 for the rifle, plus 5% tax, more than 40 years ago. I can remember crates of them being unpacked and sold for $27.50 (I was earning $40 a week). But NOBODY ever thought they would go to the crazy prices they are today. So if I come onto the market with one which is VERY close to new, I can pretty well guarantee that somebody is going to scream "FAKE!!!!!". And it isn't. It's the Real Thing. I bought it 40 years ago and I don't kick my stuff around. I can't afford to. Likely, neither can you.

    The same thing goes for my UNFIRED Martini-Henry Mark IV.... which is worth a lot more than the $17 I paid for it, very close to 50 years ago.

    Fortunately, most of my collection is one step ahead of the scrap-dealer.... and nobody fakes junk. Yet.

    But it is a problem, and it is going to get worse.
    .

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    Quote Originally Posted by smellie View Post
    Fortunately, most of my collection is one step ahead of the scrap-dealer.... and nobody fakes junk. Yet.


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    Legacy Member enfield303t's Avatar
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    I think it is good to see opinions on this topic. I personally would not help anyone that I didn't know very well or trust completely with any question on how to make a reproduction of anything. I know there are some things that would be much easier to reproduce than others. The internet allows people to be very anonymous and appear to be what they want us to think they are.

    I think if a person owned a legit scope, mount, pads for a T it would not be too difficult to fake the rifle, well at least alot easier than faking a scope IMO. The problem of technology being so advanced today makes it almost too easy with some things.

    Too often and not just on any one site I see people ask very detailed questions as they are "restoring" something and not just firearms and we really don't know exactly what is happening. These request are almost about anything you can think of and for me a red flag pops up instantly.

    Don't get me wrong, I do know the majority of people are honest, it's the others that I don't trust but again the internet makes us all so very anonomous. I always think of the person I knew that had a extremely collectable handgun, only one side of the gun was every photographed as the opposite side had different engraving thus making it impossible to copy. Eveyone knew this feature of the gun so wouldn't attempt to fake one. Believe me if it had been possible it would have been done.
    Why use a 50 pound bomb when a 500 pound bomb will do?

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