[QUOTE=Robert T.;5629723]Hi Chris,
The “Barter board” RK’s were IMO wartime quality control rejects. This “DIPPING 3, MICRO 800, A” RK taken from a board shows an over trimmed and uneven frame when compared to a wartime example. (The ruler is not to scale)
They would have been retrieved from the quarantine bin and offered as souvenirs, this is a plausible reason that can explain their presence at the factory after May 1945.
Robert
Hello Robert,
thank you for addressing this point. Yes I agree we see a bit of a Ludenscheid "hotch potch" turn up on the boards and your point about the reject bin being rifled for parts even a whole cross or two is realistic.
This lets me build upon the point that I was making. We do not see highly finished zinc centered Type B's turning up on the boards in abundant numbers. In fact have we seen any ?
If the highly finished Type B was being made after the war then these boards would have been their heyday. Why go to all the trouble of finishing one off so nicely when you can get away with throwing one together or using reject material. The unsuspecting allied servicemen from May 1945 onwards did not rate them by the high standards expected. Any old RK was an RK to them,
Chris
The “Barter board” RK’s were IMO wartime quality control rejects. This “DIPPING 3, MICRO 800, A” RK taken from a board shows an over trimmed and uneven frame when compared to a wartime example. (The ruler is not to scale)
They would have been retrieved from the quarantine bin and offered as souvenirs, this is a plausible reason that can explain their presence at the factory after May 1945.
Robert
Hello Robert,
thank you for addressing this point. Yes I agree we see a bit of a Ludenscheid "hotch potch" turn up on the boards and your point about the reject bin being rifled for parts even a whole cross or two is realistic.
This lets me build upon the point that I was making. We do not see highly finished zinc centered Type B's turning up on the boards in abundant numbers. In fact have we seen any ?
If the highly finished Type B was being made after the war then these boards would have been their heyday. Why go to all the trouble of finishing one off so nicely when you can get away with throwing one together or using reject material. The unsuspecting allied servicemen from May 1945 onwards did not rate them by the high standards expected. Any old RK was an RK to them,
Chris
Comment