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    Ferdinand

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    Posts posted by Ferdinand

    1. I'm have been using my Epson Stylus CX6400 all-in-one printer-scanner for some some eight years now and I'm still very satisfied with it. It was cheap then and I'm sure they are dirt cheap now. In my experience its 600-DPI scans are sharpest. Here are two sample scans. Even the reverse of the order is fairly visible, despite the 2-cm screwpost.

    2. As additional source of info devoted to famous Халхингол, 1939 I recommend this book

      "Nomonhan: Japanese-soviet Tactical Combat, 1939" by Edward J. Drea

      It was published in famous Fort Leavenworth research series in the early 80s.

      It can be downloaded from this source ;)

      http://www.ebook3000....81-_48701.html

      Highly interesting and recommended book.

      This year another book on Nomonhan was published, called Nomonhan, 1939: The Red Army's Victory That Shaped World War II, by Stuart D. Goldman:

      http://www.amazon.co.../dp/1591143292/

    3. This is not how a Soviet mint engraver would have engraved it. The shape is off and it's too shallow. Have a look here, they don't have a 1st Class pictured but it gives you an idea: http://mondvor.narod.ru/OZaSlRod.html

      Plus, things that seem to be too good to be true usually are. If you got this for under the market value that is a red mark. Do you really think the seller couldn't tell the difference between a 2nd and 3rd Class? Deals like these could happen with a rare variation of an award like the Order of the Red Star, but not with a Homeland 1st Class. If the piece was real, the seller must have paid a fortune for it and wouldn't have sold it to you for a low price.

    4. I think an important aspect to keep in mind is that citations don't always mention locations, or perhaps just some names of villages on local and tactical level. In the case of Kursk, no fighting took place close to the city, so awards that can be considered "for Kursk" don't always mention this city. The same goes for a considerable part of the awards that can be considered "for Leningrad". I think that is why we don't recognize many citation as detailing a fragment of a major, famous campaign. It takes some order of battle research to find out where the recipient's unit was at the specified time to be able to place those citations in context. In the case of Stalingrad, a lot of fighting took place in the city itself, making it easy to link a citation to the battle of Stalingrad.

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