It was very interesting, to say the least.
This thread did show in scientific clarity that one can compare (good pictures provided) even the tiny little details of the oaks and determine the origin from the same die. One should not forget the detail involved here: the distance between two grid lines represent approx. 0.2 - 0.3 mm. This is how detailed we were looking, something the bare eye can hardly achieve.
I'm pleased with the results which should give a lot of people more confidence in this process and also will scare off the 'bad' guys a little more.
As I said before, I do not know whether the presented oaks are good, BUT I know now that they neither did come from the Type I nor the Type II Godet dies. If there were only those two dies, the oaks are no good.
Also, it is clear that those oaks are no restrikes since they did not come from the two above mentioned dies. The question of marking which type with what and hollow/not-hollow is a mute point.
There might be people out there who will doubt the results because of photographic distortions, light, frosting or whatever. However, if one compares down to a level of 0.2-0.3 mm and find NO common features at all those remarks turn into self denial.
There will be others who will say one has to handle the real thing to determine the "real thing". This might be true as a final determination check, but this method as developed and used here is free from "feelings" and has the cold and unbetrayable trait of unromantic science. And can be done by everybody.
We are dealing here with pieces made on machines with the typical traits of machine-created pieces. As I said before and will say again and again: Same die, same features. This is one of the corner stones of our hobby.
It is not taking the "romantic" aspect out, it is bringing more security in! Part of the 'secret handshake' has been replaced..
Dietrich
This thread did show in scientific clarity that one can compare (good pictures provided) even the tiny little details of the oaks and determine the origin from the same die. One should not forget the detail involved here: the distance between two grid lines represent approx. 0.2 - 0.3 mm. This is how detailed we were looking, something the bare eye can hardly achieve.
I'm pleased with the results which should give a lot of people more confidence in this process and also will scare off the 'bad' guys a little more.
As I said before, I do not know whether the presented oaks are good, BUT I know now that they neither did come from the Type I nor the Type II Godet dies. If there were only those two dies, the oaks are no good.
Also, it is clear that those oaks are no restrikes since they did not come from the two above mentioned dies. The question of marking which type with what and hollow/not-hollow is a mute point.
There might be people out there who will doubt the results because of photographic distortions, light, frosting or whatever. However, if one compares down to a level of 0.2-0.3 mm and find NO common features at all those remarks turn into self denial.
There will be others who will say one has to handle the real thing to determine the "real thing". This might be true as a final determination check, but this method as developed and used here is free from "feelings" and has the cold and unbetrayable trait of unromantic science. And can be done by everybody.
We are dealing here with pieces made on machines with the typical traits of machine-created pieces. As I said before and will say again and again: Same die, same features. This is one of the corner stones of our hobby.
It is not taking the "romantic" aspect out, it is bringing more security in! Part of the 'secret handshake' has been replaced..
Dietrich
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