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Well, folks, I'm snowed in today. No work. A little time on my hands. Sorting through a bag of "once fired .22 Hornets" I came across 2 "K" shells, and it got me to thinking about a project that I consider from time to time, and usually abandon.
Does the grip have a wooden or bone pin holding it on the blade? If it does pull the pin out and advise us on the characters you find.Some of the officer and NCO swords were old blades with military parts.The family blades are very spendy.Most of the families want them back and it is not uncommon to realize thousands of dollars for them.Let us know.Otherwise 200 or 400 is the going rate ...
The fella I built the Spitfire for flew for the Confederate Air Force and got to fly Sentimental Journey and the German Heinkel and others. The Heinkel was destroyed after he quit flying for them. Glad you got to get one more item done from your bucket list.
That was back in the day when ARMEX used to set up and display parts kits and all kinds of related MG stuff. The gun was designed and built at about the same time a number of others were built like the Spitfire and various models of the Commando. The guns were built a few at a time and production serial numbers seemed to have started a 1000.
And in fact, if you check the above chronographed data with a 1" bbl, one of the 31 grain .22LR bullets tested (The Federal "spitfire") actually outperforms all of the .22 magnum rounds!