Hi Tom,
Yep I'm very well aware of those FLL metamorphosises. The late war hollow IAB's indeed proof that they were made after the crimped in examples but here you could argue that they made the switch to safe yet more material.
Anyway I don't think I know a lot of makers that started out with hollow production, then switched to massive production (produced an abundance of variants on the theme when it come to IAB's) only to switch back to hollow production again.
The point that makes your theory acceptable to me and not in contradiction whith what I like to believe is that you underline that the FLL CCC production at best was launched in 1943, indeed a time frame in which crimping would have been in use. I can only imagine that, in line with other makers, their crimping reverse die didn't last all the way either and they were forced to create a second one to continue CCC production with new reverse hardware.
KR
Philippe
Yep I'm very well aware of those FLL metamorphosises. The late war hollow IAB's indeed proof that they were made after the crimped in examples but here you could argue that they made the switch to safe yet more material.
Anyway I don't think I know a lot of makers that started out with hollow production, then switched to massive production (produced an abundance of variants on the theme when it come to IAB's) only to switch back to hollow production again.
The point that makes your theory acceptable to me and not in contradiction whith what I like to believe is that you underline that the FLL CCC production at best was launched in 1943, indeed a time frame in which crimping would have been in use. I can only imagine that, in line with other makers, their crimping reverse die didn't last all the way either and they were forced to create a second one to continue CCC production with new reverse hardware.
KR
Philippe
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