Hello all,
I am a member of a Finnish re-enactment group Etulinja and we are good friends with a privately owned artillery museum here in Finland. Last weekend we decided to take an old dirty 3.7 cm Pak they've had laying in the corner of one of their halls and give it a nice good clean.
We rolled it out and started cleaning:
The first thing we did was to check and see what kind of stampings it had. There was a Waffenamt stamp in almost every part but I don't have a lot of information on the other stamps. If you have more information on for example what factory this was made in and such, don't hesitate to let me know:
There was a kind of a beauty under all that dirt:
The gun was bought by the museum in the 60's or so, and hasn't been touched since, except for the occasional oiling and greasing. It has been deactivated (probably by the military before auctioning it out) by welding a steel pipe inside the whole length of the barrel. The breech and everything else still works, though. The gun also has a Finnish barrel installed in 1944 which slightly differs from the German one.
The gun has probably been sandblasted and painted with that sand color at some point of its life after deactivation.
The museum is not going to sell this gun but they are interested of it's current monetary value if someone here could throw out an estimate. If you have questions or comments, feel free to reply to this thread.
Thank you for your attention.
I am a member of a Finnish re-enactment group Etulinja and we are good friends with a privately owned artillery museum here in Finland. Last weekend we decided to take an old dirty 3.7 cm Pak they've had laying in the corner of one of their halls and give it a nice good clean.
We rolled it out and started cleaning:
The first thing we did was to check and see what kind of stampings it had. There was a Waffenamt stamp in almost every part but I don't have a lot of information on the other stamps. If you have more information on for example what factory this was made in and such, don't hesitate to let me know:
There was a kind of a beauty under all that dirt:
The gun was bought by the museum in the 60's or so, and hasn't been touched since, except for the occasional oiling and greasing. It has been deactivated (probably by the military before auctioning it out) by welding a steel pipe inside the whole length of the barrel. The breech and everything else still works, though. The gun also has a Finnish barrel installed in 1944 which slightly differs from the German one.
The gun has probably been sandblasted and painted with that sand color at some point of its life after deactivation.
The museum is not going to sell this gun but they are interested of it's current monetary value if someone here could throw out an estimate. If you have questions or comments, feel free to reply to this thread.
Thank you for your attention.
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