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The 74 are about as with the limpet but fetch high prices, the hard to find part on the 74 is the outer metal cover just for them are silly money. My holy grails are a nice set of butter fly wings SD2 and a 88 mint flak projectile.
The 74 are about as with the limpet but fetch high prices, the hard to find part on the 74 is the outer metal cover just for them are silly money. My holy grails are a nice set of butter fly wings SD2 and a 88 mint flak projectile.
I realize that I will need to step up and pay a good amount for either of these, but as long as they are nice examples, I am willing. I already have a couple of the No.74's, but not a complete one with the clamshell exterior.
Thats what i am after the condition. When you think they used thousands of these in the UK all the bits buried and scattered everywhere, clam shells dropped over the old training commons rusting to nothing, sometimes a gem turns up like a handle or clam shell turns up at a car boot or collection because someone picked it up over the common during the war or 1950s as a curiosity. When one turns up its first on the draw with cash in hand. Ebay can be a good place as those selling dont know what they got and list it under something else, fingers crossed, happy hunting.
About 15 years ago the late Mike Saffery told me that in the 1980s he was rooting about inside Fort Amhurst in Chatham and found a metal cupboard full of rusty sticky bomb clam shell covers. Dozens of them. When he went back a few weeks later with a holdall, the cupboard had gone along with the contents.
About 15 years ago the late Mike Saffery told me that in the 1980s he was rooting about inside Fort Amhurst in Chatham and found a metal cupboard full of rusty sticky bomb clam shell covers. Dozens of them. When he went back a few weeks later with a holdall, the cupboard had gone along with the contents.
About 15 years ago the late Mike Saffery told me that in the 1980s he was rooting about inside Fort Amhurst in Chatham and found a metal cupboard full of rusty sticky bomb clam shell covers. Dozens of them. When he went back a few weeks later with a holdall, the cupboard had gone along with the contents.
I would have thought that if only the clamshells had been taken, but since the cabinet was gone too, it sounded like a cleanout for disposal. But I do hope you are right and that they show up on the market someday soon.
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