Non-iron cores are considerably more scarce than iron cores, but that doesn't really make a non-iron cored EK more valuable.
As for materials used in relationship to the LDO and supposedly strict controls, I've always been confused by the timeline of LDO and Lieferant numbers and I also think that the "control" issue is over assumed by some. There might have been regulations in place, but that doesn't mean that the regulations were being observed. For example, I have a non-magnetic core EK 1 by Wachtler and Lange with their LDO number "L/55." Some strict control, huh?
Finally, I think that the idea that non-iron cored EKs were manufactured for KM personnel so that the crosses wouldn't rust at sea is pretty much of an old wives' tale.
As for materials used in relationship to the LDO and supposedly strict controls, I've always been confused by the timeline of LDO and Lieferant numbers and I also think that the "control" issue is over assumed by some. There might have been regulations in place, but that doesn't mean that the regulations were being observed. For example, I have a non-magnetic core EK 1 by Wachtler and Lange with their LDO number "L/55." Some strict control, huh?
Finally, I think that the idea that non-iron cored EKs were manufactured for KM personnel so that the crosses wouldn't rust at sea is pretty much of an old wives' tale.
Comment