> Dennis Schneider is a surplus dealer in Belgium I
> believe.
That is correct.
> Don't worry about the language. His English may be
> better than your French.
So true! His Flemish is probably better than his
French. His command of the English language is just
fine.
> Having said that, I do not KNOW Mr. Schneider so I
> cannot vouch for him. His
> stuff is also in the "West" and not in the former
> Soviet Union where there
> are other complications.
I purchased some WW2 Dodge parts from Dennis about two
years ago and was quite satisfied with the price and
the condition of the items. Everything was received as
described and well packed.
Dennis made the extra effort and crated the items and
made out the invoices for export from Belgium to the
US. It was probably more work for him than it was
worth, and I thank him for it.
He does on occasion sell small quantities of items
(like the ones I bought), but I suspect that is not
the majority of his business.
I would not hesitate to do business with Dennis
Schneider again.
> As always, "Caveat emptor" (Latin for buyer beware).
> For that radio gear
> deal, one would want to fly over and have a look at
> it anyway.
Probably true. It might take nearly a lifetime for a
specialist in wireless equipment to sell all that...
It looks like the Jeep collection has been sold too:
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/7771/index1.htm
Brandon
> ----- Original Message -----
> Subject: Re: [MV] WW-2 Wireless equipment for sale
>
>
> > What's the source of that list?
> >
> > It looks like it was put together by someone who
> > doesn't speak english.
> >
> > Suspicious,
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sun Sep 02 2001 - 11:15:40 PDT