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Recent Posts
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By manayunkman · Posted
Welcome to the forum. My fathers family is from NL and I used to go into the bunkers in Scheveningen. I think they are gone now. -
By Taylor · Posted
Welcome to the forum, interesting story on how you got started. -
By Cobra 6 Actual · Posted
Hello and welcome to this Forum. Your English is much, much better than my non-existent Dutch/Nederlands! -
By Tonomachi · Posted
Yup genuine and one of the sought after ones as it differs from the norm with a flat profile. There are a couple of variations of this particular wing but the identify of the maker is not known. Whoever produced it also made a flat profile paratrooper wing. -
By Adje · Posted
very interestings finds!! keep up the good work greetings -
By Adje · Posted
Hi everyone, I’m new to this group. My name is Marc; I’m 46 years old and live in Sittard, in the Dutch province of Limburg. My passion for World War II actually began when I was a young teenager. My grandparents used to tell me stories about the war though I didn't fully grasp everything that had happened back then, I certainly did as I got older. As kids, we often played near the bunkers along the river here; I absolutely loved it. When I turned 18 in 1998, I bought my first metal detector and was instantly hooked. I started searching near those bunkers where we used to play,believe I found a few shell casings here and there,but as the years went by and I acquired better detectors and a car, we began searching all over the Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany, and managed to find some really cool stuff. I still search for WWII relics, but for about 15 years now, I’ve also been looking for Celtic and Roman artifacts I only have to go a few hundred meters away to find that older material. I’ve regularly managed to return WWII items,with scratched service numbers, laundry numbers, or names—to the families of veterans, including those of fallen soldiers. That’s a bit about me. The first photo is from 1998. The second photo is from last winter. And just a random photo of a WWII dump pit. sorry for my bad English greetings -
By yokota57 · Posted
P4M-1Qs of Patrol Unit & Naval Communications Unit 32G (?) at NAS Port Lyautey, French Morocco. I presume the tail codes are spurious? -
By mikie · Posted
Those things are way cool. My old job had a huge one in the machine shop. It was old but not military marked. I loved when a project came up that needed holes punched! mikie -
By jmd62 · Posted
Well said and I'm with you, if it has some parts that are WW2 but not "correct" for the date range of the receiver, they are part of the rifle's history and I wouldn't change them. Great rifle!! -
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