Panama
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2020
Sounds like a great find. I had a Nagoya Arsenal type 99 for a while, and moved it on to make some room. The guy who showed up to buy it ended up being a first generation Japanese-American. I’m glad it went to someone who would really appreciate it.Update on the Type 99 I found:
I got it down from the rafters to have a good look. The imperial chrysanthemum was defaced, which is fine since I’m not looking to sell. Everything else points to it being fairly early production; serial is in the 32000 range, although I didn’t think to take a picture or check the Arsenal mark. Barrel band has the monopod mount, but no obvious signs of wear that it actually had a monopod. Teardrop bolt handle, bore is a little rusted, action and furniture hardware all has surface rust but the “Type 99” characters are still legible. Still has the anti-aircraft sights like I mentioned before and the range graduation is still legible. The barrel band and front cap are both missing their screws, but I found the owner’s old hardware bucket, so there’s a slim chance they’re still around. Replacements are not easy to come by, if a quick internet search is to be believed.
The springs are still tight as hell, but the bolt sticks a bit. It spent 40 years in a leaky uninsulated shed and it’s still probably in better shape than rifles that spent 12 months in the Pacific.
In a different box we found a bayonet too, which was a welcome surprise. It was the Type 30 mode with earlier style curved quillion:
View attachment 2311138
(As a fun aside, it was surreal to me that the site above, last updated in the year 2000, has a reference to collector books by “McCollum and Honeycutt”, the McCollum in question being the father of Ian from Forgotten Weapon’s fame)
The bayonet was Tokyo Arsenal marked and in the 200000 range.
It’s been fun find and I hope it’s not the start of the milsurp bug because there’s never been a worse time to get into that.
I’m torn, because I want it cleaned up and restored, but I’m not sure where the line stops at harming the historicity of the piece. Also, I’m having a hard time finding a gunsmith that specializes in that kind of thing. I want the stock cleaned but want to keep or mimic the original surface, and I want to clean the rust without messing with the markings or functionality. Most of the wear is from after the rifle was brought home.