Originally posted by Gary Symonds
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In response to Sonderkommando's question:
"What if your badge was made by one of the other 2 makers of these badges on different dies?"
I haven't watched the videos, and have no familiarity with the badges being discussed, but, there are a couple of factual statements I can make here:
1. Each pair of dies will impart its own set of characteristics to the stamped metal.
2. These characteristics can be caused a few different ways: during the die making stages, through corrosion, and through wear to the dies themselves.
3. Authenticating a piece of militaria using the study of die states is possible, and 100% foolproof, PROVIDED that we know all known manufacturers of a badge, and have a reasonable, well-founded idea of how many die pairs were used in production.
US Coins are a bit different than militaria, with respect to the fact that mintage figures are known, as well as which mints produced in any given year, my point being that it's a much more exact science.
In militaria, it's more of a guessing game, but we can make educated guesses...
A little while back, I wrote a post about this, and as it applies to tinnies:
http://dev.wehrmacht-awards.com/foru...d.php?t=845127
In the case of a maker-marked badge, and a non-marked example, that show identical flaws on the obverse: this would simply point to the reverse die breaking. The die being out of alignment could cause that to happen.
If you guys want to point me to the threads, or discuss privately, send me a PM! I just don't want to keep hijacking this thread!
Best,
Andre
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