Jump to content
Due to increases in hosting costs, and in an effort to continue keeping USMF free, changes to inboxes are coming on September 1, 2025 - Please Read . . . ×
  • Donate

    Type donation amount in box below.

    IMPORTANT! If you donate via PayPal using an e-mail address different than the one you are currently using on USMF and would like a 2024 Donor Icon added to your account, you MUST CONTACT vintageproductions or stratasfan and let them know what email address was used for the donation.

    Thank you for supporting USMF.

    Donate Sidebar by DevFuse
  • Recent Posts

    • 1st Sgt CES
      Great Bullion Patch !
    • kfields
      Maybe you guys are right! Apparently there were bayonets made for the M1 early on with the "square fullers" before they transitioned away to the more familiar rounded fullers. A random pic of a bayonet with square fullers:    
    • kfields
      Good guesses. I have this old broken off 1943 PAL bayonet blade in the basement and the fuller(?) of the mystery blade is a bit wider than the PAL. Would all the 1905 fullers have the same width measurement?   Here's a comparative picture:  
    • M1M1
      Found a nice set of Blackington bomber wings with a piece of history attached
    • ScottN
      Hey, just a quickie here on GILL NETS for the Survival Vests packaging I've seen...primarily SRU & OV-1 series, Air Force & Army as issued during the Vietnam War. The standard is the thin plastic baggie containing paper data, FSN & 1970 dated often stapled closed. The square packet is a thin cellulose plastic type material. I've only seen one of these. The other is the cloth / canvas like material often found with a paper layer and used to wrap & heat seal many types of G.I. items. (I really should know the technical terminology & composition here.) It is marked GILL NET in marker but packet is printed with makers (& contents?) data, dated 1965. Cheers
    • Manchu Warrior
      I picked this odd item up yesterday at a yard sale and the gentleman informed me that he purchased it at an antique store in Gettysburg decades ago.  When I saw it standing against a table I assumed it was some type of raining rifle and he explained to me that it dates back to the Spanish American War and was used for bayonet training. Therefore the original “rubber duck”.  It was made to resemble a Krag rifle with a fixed bayonet and it stands 60” tall. It also has a small leather sack attached to the tip. If it was placed there to offer protection to the OPFOR soldier it wasn’t much. It also had metal weights implanted to make it the same weight as a Krag rifle. I have no idea how rare this item happens to be. With that said the only information I found on line was that one sold on IMA and the information the gentleman gave me on the item was in fact correct.  He also sold it to me for a whopping $20 so it was a rather easy decision to buy it.  With all that said I think it’s is pretty odd as well as cool!  What do you think? 
    • hyrax222
      In former iteration it may have been a M1905 bayonet, from WW1 to early WW2.   My .02   hyrax222
    • otter42
      Thanks Linedoggie, makes sense. 
    • Cobra 6 Actual
      Anniversary badges are another type of “Special Event” badge, along with Presidential Inaugurals, Memorials, Millennium, etc.
    • Arisaka99
      I just consider it damage, but deliberately so. Top two look like the side of a file, the bottom looks like a blade- do two different events?   
  • * While this forum is partially supported by our advertisers, we make no claim nor endorsement of authenticity of the products which these advertisers sell. If you have an issue with any advertiser, please take it up with them and not with the owner or staff of this forum.

×
×
  • Create New...