Zimmermann yes, but am I wrong in thinking that this would not be considered 'textbook'?
I believe that Tonys cross is the re-worked frame version with alternate core (slim dates).
Any marked Fritz Zimmermann I have seen has the differing core type.
Please correct me if I am wrong (it happens a lot!)
Regards - Danny
Hello
IMO Tony and Nick showed the early type of Fritz Zimmermann, they are normally unmarked, cross showed by Danny is the late that many times is marked 6.
Hello
IMO Tony and Nick showed the early type of Fritz Zimmermann, they are normally unmarked, cross showed by Danny is the late that many times is marked 6.
I agree
Best regards,
Streptile
Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)
Hello
IMO Tony and Nick showed the early type of Fritz Zimmermann, they are normally unmarked, cross showed by Danny is the late that many times is marked 6.
This has me a little confused....
Douglas did an in-depth study on these crosses a couple of years back and came up with the theory that the wider bead cross (the one with the slim date style and wider beading) is, in fact, a re-worked version of the known marked Zimmermann cross.
Thus making the slim date version the later type. (That's what I understood from it anyway).
I read through the threads but I could find no evidence that the "fat beading" frame is a reworked (i.e., later) version of the "thin beading" frame. All I saw was that some of the beading patterns matched from one to the other, which is also evident in your comparative illustration above. This can happen for any number of reasons.
I believe the "fat beading" cross is a 6., and that it is earlier than the other because it is often found unmarked and in early-style Packets. The chronology, of course, is speculative, but our experience does show that unmarked examples are often earlier.
I would be happy to hear more about the "reworked" theory, if there is more to be said, and of course I would be happy as always to learn something new.
Best regards,
Streptile
Looking for ROUND BUTTON 1939 EK1 Spange cases (LDO or PKZ)
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