BergerBoy
Well-known member
Hi All - been away from the Forum for a while.
Picked this nice Grasoli specimen a little while ago for a good price on the Bay.
Unfortunately, it was damaged by our good old USPS during shipment - there were no signs of damage in the listing photos or description.
But when it arrived (in bubble wrap and a flimsy envelope!) the grip was broken with 2 loose pieces, and the actual blade hilt was cracked all the way through from top to bottom!!
Resolved it with the seller, but mostly sickened to think this piece of history was irreversibly damaged, after all it's probably been through in its past.
The Post Office only would cover $50 on an insurance claim, but I would need to surrender the bayo to them permanently!
See the damage (after my attempts to repair) in the last 3 photos.
I hadn't even heard of the Grasoli manufacturer before, so I picked this up due to my assumed rarity.
But I now see that they continued to make metal goods after the war in Solingen (cutting tools and otherwise).
Anyone have any good history on the manufacturer, and if these bayonets were war-time or post-?
Thanks!
Picked this nice Grasoli specimen a little while ago for a good price on the Bay.
Unfortunately, it was damaged by our good old USPS during shipment - there were no signs of damage in the listing photos or description.
But when it arrived (in bubble wrap and a flimsy envelope!) the grip was broken with 2 loose pieces, and the actual blade hilt was cracked all the way through from top to bottom!!
Resolved it with the seller, but mostly sickened to think this piece of history was irreversibly damaged, after all it's probably been through in its past.
The Post Office only would cover $50 on an insurance claim, but I would need to surrender the bayo to them permanently!
See the damage (after my attempts to repair) in the last 3 photos.
I hadn't even heard of the Grasoli manufacturer before, so I picked this up due to my assumed rarity.
But I now see that they continued to make metal goods after the war in Solingen (cutting tools and otherwise).
Anyone have any good history on the manufacturer, and if these bayonets were war-time or post-?
Thanks!