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Recent Posts
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By vernon · Posted
Composite Ribbon Bar Ribbon Mounts/Base Bars from Myer Inc. and the Aronoff Service Product Company of New York. The ribbon slides were manufactured by Myers and Wolf Brown. The clutches were made by Jandy. -
By General Apathy · Posted
. Work on the USAAF ' Follow Me ' Jeep I called in to see what progress had been made on cleaning down the paintwork on the Yellow and Black Slat-Grille Follow Me Jeep, he appeared to be having some good success at pressure washing off the grey top coat that had been sprayed all over the vehicle. Even cleaning off half the dash where the vehicle plates are fixed. He is going to keep this one in his collection as an originally painted one is a great rarity, there are plenty of modern painted copies around but he is a stickler for originality. Norman D. Landing, Forum Normandy Correspondent, 01 July 2O26. .. -
By General Apathy · Posted
. Hi Bluehawk, Regarding Russian Jeeps. Well strange how events unfold, today I had the pleasure of meeting the owners of fifteen Jeeps visiting from Prague. The one gentleman now aged 67 owns various WWII vehicles, these being several Jeeps a Bren gun carrier and others. He related to me that when he and a couple of friends were around 20 years of age they saw an old Jeep sitting in a small village outside Prague, they enquired at all the houses within the village and the story was it had been sat there abandoned by Russian troops since WWII, so they set about recovering it, as it was not owned by anyone in the village. It happened to be an early Model Willys MA, today these are amongst the holy-grail of Jeep collectors as they are so rare. This gentleman was obviously emotional as he spoke, it had long been his dream to visit Normandy and it had been impossible whilst Prague was under Russian control. This is a stock image of an MA, also shown a wartime Willys advert showing Russian troops using Willys Jeeps. Norman D. Landing, Forum Normandy Correspondent, 01 July 2O26. .. -
By Jcoll84 · Posted
Here is what I have found: NARA contains records for government contracts from FY66-FY75. Searching for this contract gives the following information: Contractor: Canadian Commercial Corp (probably a parent of WCW) Location: Canada Award of $200,000 or more in support of South East Asia (made to be used in the Vietnam War) Contract Date: June 1969 Estimated Completion Date: June 1970 It seems that the posters suggesting these are Canadian-made are correct. The FY1974 example posted in this thread is likewise listed as Canadian made. I don't think it would list Canada if it was produced by a subsidiary in the US. For example, Ingersoll also made canteen cups, but you won't find any entries for that under Ingersoll in NARA records as they're all listed under the parent company Borg-Werner. Despite this, the state/city point to where Ingersoll specifically was located. This was all pre-Berry Amendment, so military equipment could be procured from foreign sources as a matter of course -
By easterneagle87 · Posted
Got to thinking, are they for the Vandergrift jacket? -
By General Apathy · Posted
. Hi Kevin, Manuals are not always a great help, and I agree, the 1956 Willys M38 manual is an example of this, as the Jeeps on the flat car are not M38's, possibly wartime Willy's MB's at best, however the first vehicle is definitely a Ford GPW and possibly so is the one to the rear of it. !!!! Ad-Infinitum. as they say in Rome 🤣 Norman D. Landing, Forum Normandy Correspondent, 01 July 2O26. .. -
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By mvmhm · Posted
I owned one in the 1990's where they took a grinder and just went down the middle of the blade, leaving the upper and lower portions of the inscription intact. I sometimes think they did the minor grinding just to say they complied with the removal. Mark sends -
By vernon · Posted
The experienced ribbon bar collector knows that missing ribbons on early multibar ribbons or ribbons out of placement (order of precedence) does not necessarily mean a ribbon bar is fake. Also uniformity of a ribbon bar's components does not always guarantee authenticity. Shown is an example of a composite bar. The ribbon bar mounts/basebars are from N. S. Meyer and the Aronoff Service Product Company of New York. The ribbon slides were manufactured by both Meyer and Wolf Brown. The clutches were manufactured by Jandy. Sometimes to make things happen you have to use what you have in hand. -
By MilitaryMuseum · Posted
Is this a British or American WWI Brodie Helmet? Thanks John
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