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呵呵,很好奇这只疑似“大”字印记造假的FN1910是如何漂洋过海出现在澳洲的,而且被描了一遍的“大”字印记依然看起来不真,各位看官可对照一下真品的笔迹。不过楼主也不亏,毕竟一字之差确实能够多去好几十趟“金拱门”了。The Japanese FN 1910's are not able to be found or characterized in any serial number range as they were pulled from existing inventory at the time of the order. The most common serial number ranges are around 387,000 then again 409,000 and 416,000 then 423,000 and interspersed in the 430 to 440,000. The ones with the Kanji "DAI" marks seem to only appear on the last shipments of December 1939 and on a batch of 3000 guns shipped on March 2, 1940. I must say the normal Kanji marked guns fall in the 453,000 to 457,000 range. The Kanji mark has been known to be faked. The original Posters photos are too blurry for me to make any determination one way or another. The Kanji mark may or may not be genuine. I have attached a pic of mine below of a genuine mark. So If one comes across a FN1910 in a Japanese holster it may or may not be a Japanese weapon. The only way to really tell is have the gun verified through the shipping records that still exist from FN. If it has a Kanjimark and falls within the 453,000 to 457,000 range you can feel pretty certain and if it falls outside that range then the Kanji marks need verified and or the serial number verifed through shipping records. of course capture papers would be best LOL
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