Cool. Another friend of mine has a disarmed Kar98K rifle. Scarily enough, it wouldn't be too hard to get a hold of a firing pin.GiglameshSoulEater said:At agun shop I visited, they had some WW1 rifles for sale. Lee-Enfields,, the german, french and russian varients of bolt action rifles. Several of these has folding spike bayonets.binnsyboy said:high quality recreations of historical weapons. As does my friend. For me, it started as an interest in movie props, but I like this more. My friend has three high quality WW2 german daggers, and I am in the process of getting a pompeii gladius. I'm particularly jelly of my uncle, though. He has three authentic WW2 unfixed bayonet blades from France, England and Germany respectively.
Thought you might have liked them![]()
These actually functioned, though. The thing is, .303 isn't too cheap.binnsyboy said:Cool. Another friend of mine has a disarmed Kar98K rifle. Scarily enough, it wouldn't be too hard to get a hold of a firing pin.GiglameshSoulEater said:At agun shop I visited, they had some WW1 rifles for sale. Lee-Enfields,, the german, french and russian varients of bolt action rifles. Several of these has folding spike bayonets.binnsyboy said:high quality recreations of historical weapons. As does my friend. For me, it started as an interest in movie props, but I like this more. My friend has three high quality WW2 german daggers, and I am in the process of getting a pompeii gladius. I'm particularly jelly of my uncle, though. He has three authentic WW2 unfixed bayonet blades from France, England and Germany respectively.
Thought you might have liked them![]()
I remember in Poland you could buy replicas of daggers, and various pistols. A friend of mine bought a replica flintlock. But we couldn't be bothered paying the fee to take a suitcase on the plane, so he couldn't take it back.