Originally posted by Steve P
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The Surprising "Wideframe" EK Family
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Hi Trevor
apologize for my great delay, I find this work very very intesting !!
I have had some problems to understand all because my English is not so good and I have lost time.
Really very interesting to find these crosses dated 1870 1914 and 1939 with the same frame design.
One question was born inside me during the reading : when were manufactured ? I have read your answers about it, could be right but my question for you is : these frames seems manufactured using the same material but if the 1914 and 1870 were manufactured in the 1st 15 years of the twentieth century why they are not in silver ? didn' t the EKII manufactured normally in silver in that era ? I find a little bit strange that Juncker or AWS used other material less noble than silver. Just answers I have based on my experience, please forgive me if may be they have a simple answer.
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Hi Fabrizio,
Nice to have your comments here, thank you.
I think Greg M probably answered your questions best upthread when he wrote:
Originally posted by gregM View PostAnother interesting tidbit----
It is widely known that AWS made a lot of crosses with frames made
of materials other than silver. (The brass pillowbacks as example)
My 1870 wideframe has a yellow alloy frame of some sort. Not sure
what it is but it is NOT silver.
material options for their decorations. A replacement EK could be bought, for example,
in an alloy construction or, for a small increase in price, in real silver ("echt silber").
These options may be seen in period catalogues. I see no reason why Juncker could
not have done the same.
Indeed, the 1870 and 1914 EKs are known to exist in different materials. Some
are silver, some are alloy. Greg M has an alloy 1870 Wideframe, as he says,
and Tiger1 has a silver one:
WAF member Tiger 1
Here is a 1914 Wideframe in silver next to another in alloy:
WAF member Roglebk
Furthermore, my assignation of Juncker as the maker of the 1870 and 1914 is
really speculative. While I personally believe it to be true, there is less evidence
to support it than there is evidence to support the assertion that they made the
1939-series crosses. So I call these Junckers, but AWS is another possibility, as
are any number of other makers.
By the way, if anyone has a Juncker catalogue, I would be very happy to see it
posted, even without photos, to know if Juncker, too, sold EKs made from different
materials.Best regards,
Streptile
Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)
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Since I am parting with them, I'll add these crosses to this thread.
They were two of the ones I used for reference and research, and are by far the finest two examples of the Juncker Schinkel I have seen:
Number 1
Number 2
Best regards,
Streptile
Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)
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