Clothes hanger. Patent 1049867 Jan 7 1913 Loeser Kalina of Brooklyn, New YorkHere's a whatsit,
Well done - and on not a lot of evidence!P&C & Pat'd and that ain’t no guess!
29 give or take.Excellent! Thanks! Any thoughts on when it was made?
-Don
Miter trimmer.Miter shaver for the final fit on precision miters like for picture framing or cabinetry.
It has a more official name, but I CRS right now.
Pootatuck Mfg makes the Lion a big brand, Oliver is another. Beware of the blades, when sharp, they can remove fingers. Many people build blocks to jam in there to keep them stationary when moving it.Neighbor brought this down and I don't have a clue. No marks other than 45 or 90 degree marks. Long arm around back roles the cutters for cutting angles
The barrel is 500. thousands and the top is .625. T think you have something there. Just what part? Hmm.I'm thinking pellet gun part, but what size is the tube and rings?
Mossberg no. 322Mossberg made one of those rigs as well.
That is the gas cylinder from a US rifle M1 Garand that someone has altered (sporterized) removing the front sight protectors, the bayonet attachment lug and stacking swivel. It is only threaded on one end for the gas plug. made of stainless btw.Another what the heck. It is threaded on both ends of the lower barrel. And the other looks like a gun sight. Thanks.
Thanks a million. I knew someone like you would pop up. I know some guys that may need it.That is the gas cylinder from a US rifle M1 Garand that someone has altered (sporterized) removing the front sight protectors, the bayonet attachment lug and stacking swivel. It is only threaded on one end for the gas plug. made of stainless btw.
My father had a sporterized '03 rebarreled to .270. Nice gun, but he sold it many years ago.The fella who altered that gas cylinder probably envisioned something like this,, in the 50`s when surplus rifles were cheap and ammo too,, a few got "sporterized" although a better choice to start with would be the M1903
I have had few when they were cheap. But way to heavy.The fella who altered that gas cylinder probably envisioned something like this,, in the 50`s when surplus rifles were cheap and ammo too,, a few got "sporterized" although a better choice to start with would be the M1903



Yep. but I'm not convinced its military. Were there military versions? Possibly, but searching got me nowhere.^ with the oversize spoon and the facility for attaching them to each other: definitely "camp set".
... and my titanium spork is under 20 g!These are super light. The first thing I noticed when I picked them up:
I did a "comparison" weigh to our SS comparable tablespoon and fork:
Nickalumin: 50 Gr
SS: 100 Gr.