Originally posted by Thomas Durante
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... and it is sad to say: exactly this is impossible.
As you perhaps remember from the Rettenmaier thread we bought in 2013 the leftovers from the firm which supplied Deschler with their setups and this year i was shown the original wartime tools from Deschler in a private collection.
Now bring this together:
Someone has the Deschler tools and stamps a badge with them and solders their setup on the badge.
Would there be any chance for us to recognize the postwar strike?
- badge design and die flaws like accepted pieces?: correct
- typical Deschler setup: correct
Conclusion: every rule we constructed in the past about the look and feel of a Deschler badge would say yes to the badge but the sad true is a no.
... and now go back to 1951:
- tools and machines used in the war were still present
- the workers which handeled them during the war were still working in the firms
- supply lines for setups, paint and so on were intact and could supply the same quality as in the war
- the market was demanding stuff as good as the originals from the war
result: postwar stuff in wartime quality ... and to be honest the words "no doubt" is some sort of wishfull thinking. See attached a price list dated 1956 from the retail seller Sedlazek with the handwritten note "originals as awarded or in my words postwar stuff in wartime quality.
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