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Nagoya Nambu & A Box of Collectible Ammo

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    Nagoya Nambu & A Box of Collectible Ammo

    Stimulating the economy this weekend buying a few pistols and accessories, my friend sold me an extra firing pin for my Nambu rig. He threw this box of ammo for a little extra & i had every intention of shooting it at the range! LOL It looked old and i counted 53 rounds in the box. Luckily i looked up the brand and found out besides original Japanese ammo this is the ONLY other collectible ammo for the Nambu! Ive pieced together this rig, bought the Nagoya Nambu June 35 build, the Type III holster Nagoya Arsenal 1938 date (Check out the name/date written inside the flap, G. Heckman USN Guam 1945 you can barely make out) , original cleaning/loading rod at Show of Shows, the holster sling i can't believe i found for cheap! I've got the replacement firing pin in the pistol and the original now resides in the extra pin pocket in the holster. All i need to finish it is an extra magazine and a wrapped package of original ammo lol ( One day ill find it!)


    (Taken from Nambu World) "Besides the original Japanese rounds, at least one other type qualifies as collectible. In the early post-war period there were more war souvenir Nambus than there was ammo, so in 1948 two enterprising residents of Minneapolis, Robert E. Bard and Osborne Klavestad, got some backers and went into the business of making 8mm Nambu ammo under the B&E brand. The B&E rounds were highly unusual in that the cartridge cases were turned, not drawn in the usual way. Ten-foot lengths of brass rod were fed into a six-spindle screw machine that turned out a completed case every five seconds, or 720 per hour. The bullets were also unusual. Lead wire was cut to length, then formed in a die and plated with a copper alloy. The company only operated for a few years and their cartridges are too scarce to shoot today."
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    #2
    Very nice post and just as nice items! I have a weak spot for the early Japanese firearms like this one as well as the early holsters.

    I don’t disagree with the comments about the ammo, but I will point out that even 70s (and 80s???) era Midway 8mm Nambu is highly sought after and far from inexpensive. I do not collect Japanese weapons, but even so I have about a half dozen, some since the 60s, that I just could not pass up including a couple of early Nambus.

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      #3
      Originally posted by phild View Post
      Very nice post and just as nice items! I have a weak spot for the early Japanese firearms like this one as well as the early holsters.

      I don’t disagree with the comments about the ammo, but I will point out that even 70s (and 80s???) era Midway 8mm Nambu is highly sought after and far from inexpensive. I do not collect Japanese weapons, but even so I have about a half dozen, some since the 60s, that I just could not pass up including a couple of early Nambus.

      Thank you so much, i appreciate the kind words! i didn't know Midway made Nambu ammo too! i just bought a bunch of 7.65 auto rounds they had on sale! I like collecting the Japanese stuff i just wish i had started about 15 years ago when i started buying German guns lol. It would have been a little cheaper than today!

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        #4
        I probably have about half of the following wrong as I am going by pure memory from about 45 years ago. I think that Midway started out as a company by loading 8mm Nambu in the early to mid-1970s. I recall it was well known and highly regarded by 1977 for sure. I think that they used .30 cal M1 carbine brass but I may be wrong and someone can correct me.

        I also clearly recall being at a local small 100 table show back around 1972 and seeing a vendor with around 12-15 Nambus on his table. It was maybe a 80/20 mix of type 14s and 94s. I young guy walked up and after looking at each gun rather casually, asked how much for all? The vendor offered them at $75 and $65 each respectively. He may have come off some for the lot, I did not stick around and eavesdrop. For me that was crazy money and I know the guy bought them as they were all gone. They were all very nice condition and obvious hand picked not just flea market junk but past that I knew nothing to look for on these guns nor did many others back then.

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          #5
          Wow! man i wish it was like that still!! Im still kicking myself about 13 years ago i had a Chilean Steyer 7mm a guy offered to trade me a Nambu for it but i had to throw in another 150 bucks. It was at a time when it wasn't as easy as now to get ammo for the Nambu so i passed! lol looking back i regret that! I do recall reading about the (i believe) .30 carbine brass being cut down to make "Baby Nambu" rounds?

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            #6
            You can find Nambu magazines on ebay, some are sold as Luger magazines or just old pistol magazine, sometimes you can snag one on the cheap from someone that doesn't know what they are for. Interesting box of ammo there and I learned something new today, no clue there was ammo made here in the US that is collectible too.

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              #7
              Originally posted by ValhallaMilitaria View Post
              You can find Nambu magazines on ebay, some are sold as Luger magazines or just old pistol magazine, sometimes you can snag one on the cheap from someone that doesn't know what they are for. Interesting box of ammo there and I learned something new today, no clue there was ammo made here in the US that is collectible too.
              I’ll look on there and see if I can find a nice extra Nambu mag! That’ll just about complete the rig until I find a wrapped package of original rounds!

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