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Recent Posts
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By ScottN · Posted
Thanks you for the info on my "Red Letter Navy"! Best of luck with your projects. I'll be sure to pass on any info I run across. Cheers, Scott -
By bruno1993 · Posted
Thank you so much for your reply and the provided information! Are you saying this jacket actually belonged to a Major or should the Captain bars be replaced by branch insignia? And are you talking about the golden shoulder braids or about the braids on the cuff of the sleeve? I have much to learn about these uniforms! -
By j. t. thompson · Posted
TM 10-8400-203-23 13 3/8 in. wide, 3 in. high. (wt: .52 lbs.) U.S. Quartermaster Depot, Jeffersonville, Indiana. Comparative tests on finishes for attachment, packboard, plywood, cargo, pressed steel. (Rpt. 84) Oct. 1944. "Standard finish consists of electro-zinc plating followed by phosphate treatment and one coat of baked, semi-gloss, olive drab enamel." -
By General Apathy · Posted
. hi Kevin, thanks for showing how the army transported trailers, I have also seen them stood up against one-another on the rear panel and the lunette ring facing upwards into the air. I was looking at the way the trailers were lashed together using rope and wondered when ratchet straps were invented, Googling the question, two names are mentioned a Mathew Baldwin in 1853, and a French man Gustave Audiffren applied for a patent around 1900. Norman D. Landing, Forum Normandy Correspondent, 30 June 2O26. .. -
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By Justin B. · Posted
Nice jacket. The grade shown by the sleeve knot is major. Before 1975 the braids in the knot were: Colonel = 5 rows Lieutenant colonel = 4 Major = 3 Captain = 2 1st lieutenant = 1 2nd lieutenant = no knot The branch device was worn in the angle under the knot, or in the corresponding place for 2LT. After 1975 the multi-row knot was replaced by one with a single thicker braid, with rank instead of branch insignia below. Jackets already in possession with the old pattern sleeve ornamentation were allowed to be worn indefinitely. -
By bruno1993 · Posted
Two recently found USAF White Mess dress uniforms. One is an unnamed Lt Col. and the other has foreign/fake general shoulder boards, but does have a name. I'm still trying to figure out to whom the uniform originally belonged, as the golden letters are difficult to read; James A. Kaczmarek maybe? Enjoy! -
By Cobra 6 Actual · Posted
“U.S. Navy Personnel Support Detachment, Detroit” made-in-the-Philippines buckle:
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