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    Claymore

    Past Contributor
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    Posts posted by Claymore

    1. ...'ask and you shall receive!'....the lack of 'hakenkreuz' detail is not my idea...that's how it is displayed on the German web-site....(we all know how tough their laws are)...

      ...on the one hand (collectors view-point time), it's good to find pre-1933 tinnies which mention Adolf Hitler...I just wish they had used a better style of eagle at the top...instead of the faceless 'turkey' that adornes this badge...

      ...having said that, if it were SA then I would have snapped it up ages ago....

      .

    2. ...seen an identical tinnie for sale elsewhere....but with what appears to be an original soldered stick-pin attachment...

      ...I agree with 'mametz' that the pin fitting on the tinnie posted here does look like the kind more commonly found on porcelain and 'Efoplast' types of tinnies....but that doesn't mean that this tinnie is 'wrong'.....it could well be a period repair......who knows for sure ???

    3. ...I have one exactly like it...and regard it as original, coming from a very reliable source....the fakes usually don't have such 'sharply' defined rear sides....the detail on the reverse of the originals is every bit as good as the front side...

      ...fakes tend to be more 'muddied'...with a lack of well defined detail...

      ...I would say this is a good original tinnie....

      ...there is also a 'Stuttgart 1.VII.34' tinnie which is near identical...

      Regards.

    4. ...something special here....a SA tinnie bearing the image of Adolf Hitler no less!

      ...tinnie is approx 63mm in length...

      ...and could you get any more letters on a tinnie ???

      "Adolf Hitler Kampfbahnweihe u.1.SA Sportfest Standarte 105 Sportv. Sturm Beierfeld 4.8.-11.8.1934"

      ...note the SA logo to the left of 'Adolf'.....and the Beierfeld coat-of-arms at the base of the tinnie...

      ...quite a 'stand-out' SA tinnie if I do say so myself :rolleyes:

      .

    5. Hi Pete....

      ...quite a few great looking tinnies across several databases....looks like you've been a busy man!

      Really like the 'Sonnenwende Hamburg' tinnie...crisp detail on plastic?

      ...I'm surprised you've got any room at home for any more tinnies....

      ...I have a few of my 'favourites' on the way to me just now... ;)

      ...but having a 'few' tinnies will never do.....

      ...it must be them ALL !

    6. Hi Benten,

      I'm not much of a tinnie expert...not by a long shot....but the things I like to find out are, for instance, if the tinnie has a 'makers mark'....does that particular manufacturer still exist today?....and if so...what are they producing now...

      ...or if the tinnie features a particular landmark....is it still standing?...what is its importance?....was it a NS period monument or something older...etc, etc...

      ...all of which brings the tinnie to life....almost like a postcard in a way...a 'snap-shot' from history long gone...

    7. ...one story that was often repeated was about his time stationed on Iceland during WW2....

      ...as a supply driver, he faced many rough going roads, none more so as found on Iceland......the Army worked hard to repair and improve many of the deep pot-holes in the roads....first filling up the deep holes with any old rubbish that could be used....which included a huge stock-pile of old unopened corn-beef tins....'Grandad' hated the stuff....and was quite glad to see the tins buried under tarmac... :)

      ...one day, a food parcel arrived from home (Scotland)...a rare thing indeed, due to the high number of shipping that was sunk, many parcels and letters never arrived at their destination.......in amongst the 'luxuries' was a tin of corn-beef.....disgusted with this apparent lack of understanding from his far-off family, he discarded the unopened tin into the first pot-hole he could find....which was duly covered over with tarmac...

      ...a week later a letter arrived from home....the letter had been sent out at the same time as the parcel but had became separated and gone to another Army base...

      ...the letter contained the usual comments and well-wishes from home....and also asked how 'Grandad' had enjoyed the small bottle of whiskey which had been secreted away within a tin of corn-beef..... :o

      ...needless to say, his request to dig up the tarmac was turned down by his superiors... :shame:

      ...and so instead, he spent many a day driving along the tarmaced road...weeping at the loss of the 'amber nectar' that lay so close, but so very difficult to get hold of.... :(

      ...there's probably a moral to the story, but I'm buggered if I know what it is ?!? :unsure:

    8. ...thanks for the feedback gentlemen...very helpful...

      ...but here's another photo of the same man, probably taken earlier in his life....we know he joined up in WW1 at an early age...lying about his age to gain entry...as did many at that time...

      ...he was in a Scottish regiment...he was a local to Aberdeen / Aberdeenshire, which would normally mean he would be enlisted into the Gordon Highlanders (sadly, the regiment no longer exists...bloody army cut backs! )....but this badge doesn't look like the Gordons badge that I'm familiar with...

      ...this is an enlargement from a tiny photograph....and I guess the badge could be assumed to be one of several Scottish regimental badges...

      ...would anyone here like to hazzard a guess as to which one it could be ?

      .

    9. ...thanks Brooks...

      ...I do like tinnies made of 'Nitroplast' & 'Efoplast'....the range of colours used helps to make them stand out against the standard tin variants...

      ...I guess from a preference point of view...I rate plastic, then Efo/Nitroplast tinnies, both over tin 'tinnies'....

      ...note the image of the tower at the top left of the badge...that is the 'Old Waterworks', a prominent landmark within Bautzen....erected around 1558...

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