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02-23-2021, 05:06 PM | #1 | |
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Eternal Lifer LugerForum Patron Join Date: Jun 2002
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Trunk myths
Ok, sorry, but I came across this, really made me laugh out loud, because if you substitute the word luger or 1911, Colt SSA etc, it would be the same
https://www.hmsantiquetrunks.com/tru...JmURsfnRjr2IIg Quote:
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Edward Tinker ************ Co-Author of Police Lugers - Co-Author of Simson Lugers Author of Veteran Bring Backs Vol I, Vol II, Vol III and Vol IV |
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02-23-2021, 05:24 PM | #2 |
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What were you searching for??? New hobby???
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02-23-2021, 06:04 PM | #3 |
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When I was in England in the 1980's, I knew a man who had a machine shop on a pig farm at Martlesham Heath in Suffolk County. He had an arrangement with the farm's owner that included driving wedding parties on weekends in an antique Rolls-Royce when needed. For years he had worked in the Tower of London restoring old weapons... and he was exceptionally good at it. Tiring of the daily commute from Ipswich to London, he set up his shop. I have a S&W 586 on which he modified the front sight by milling the ramp, slotting the base and making front sight blades to fit. Included was a duplicate of the original front sight with red insert. The work is absolutely brilliant.
What's this have to do with trunks? A friend of his once bid on two trunks at a Sotheby Auction in London that were catalogued incorrectly. They didn't contain what was advertised but when his friend found them filled with genuine Samurai swords, he kept them. Knowing that my friend often worked on edged weapons for the Tower, he gave him one of the blades that had some minor pitting and told him to practice his sharpening skills on it. My friend showed me the blade and explained the markings on the tang showing how many criminals had been beheaded with it to prove it's sharpness. As far as I know he never messed with the blade as it was unbelievably sharp as it was. Anyone who has never handled a true Samurai blade would likely be amazed at the construction. I know I was. They are in a class of their own among edged weapons. That's my trunk story and even though it's second hand, I have absolutely no reason to doubt that it was true. |
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02-23-2021, 06:15 PM | #4 |
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02-23-2021, 09:10 PM | #5 |
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I used to help support banking operations in Chicago. One of the people I worked with at the bank had a side business of cleaning out houses after an estate had taken all the valuables they wanted.
He used to hire high school students for the physical labor. The deal was that he got a fee and anything he removed from the homes. On one job, his worker told him that there was a bag of tire chains out in the garage that was heavy... When he finally got around to checking it out, he found that he was the proud owner of about 5,000 silver dimes... Ka Ching... The only better story was one of my students'. He bought a recently built home, becoming the second owner after the one that had it built passed away just a year after moving in. About a year after they bought the house, they were doing a thorough cleaning of the kitchen, and found an absolutely brand new unfired M1991 Colt pistol on top of one of the kitchen cabinets. He took his CCH class, and earned his permit which allowed him to lawfully transfer the handgun to his possession (sheriff permits are required in North Carolina). Not in a trunk, but almost as good.
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02-24-2021, 01:47 AM | #6 |
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[QUOTE=Edward Tinker;337130]
"Oh yeah, the 3rd reason. Common sense. Some people just don’t use common sense. If they did these stories would sound ridiculous."/QUOTE] I think the term is an oxymoron. Good sense, or its application, doesn't strike me as all that common. More would be great, we might be able to get along without both politics and religion.
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