(Logos from 1945 Catalog)
This site has now been visited
times since the counter was installed.
Please refer to the Ordnance page, et seq.
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 1:
Comet Metal Products History
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 2:
1950s Fitted Case of Tanks.
Atomic Cannon
Honest John
USS Northampton - CLC-1
South Salem Studios
Comet, AUTHENTICAST, South Salem, and Related Links
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 3:
Comet Then and Now and Map.
The Greater World of Comet AUTHENTICAST - A
History.
Red, White, and Blue Boxes.
On this Authenticast/Comet continuation page 4:
WWII Tank ID Box.
1:500 Ships Price List.
Old AUTHENTICAST Photos.
WWII Japanese Ships ID Box.
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 5:
1950s Fitted Case of Tanks,
1-50 (continued from Cont. Page 2).
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 6:
1950s Fitted Case of Tanks,
51 - 100 (continued from Cont. Page 5.
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 7:
1950s Fitted Case of Tanks, comments
(continued from Cont. Page 6).
On the Authenticast/Comet continuation page 8:
South Salem Studio's U. S. Ships Navy Case
Comet Authenticast HELP!
(19 Oct 07)
On the Ordnance Continuation Page 1:
MORE ORDNANCE APOCRYPHA
On the Ordnance Continuation Page 2:
RAILROAD GUNS.
ATOMIC CANNON.
SMALL ARMS.
On Ordnance Continuation Page 3:
CALIBER (Calibre).
Anzio Annie.
SMALL ARMS (moved from Page 2 on 13 Apr 00)
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Russian Armor.
HELP!
Comet "Authenticast" 1:432 Aircraft Models,
(27 Dec 04)
An amazing (to me, at least) find turned up! The Rev. Timothy Henley wrote that he'd spotted a WWII tank ID model box in a second-hand store and was kind enough to furnish details and photos; here's what he first saw and what's inside:


[All pictures courtesy of and © 2004 T. E. Henley - all rights reserved]

[All pictures courtesy of and © 2004 T. E. Henley - all rights reserved]
Next, here are closer shots of the left and right sides:



Then, icing on the cake, Rev. Henley sent me a very-high-resolution copy of a contact sheet of individual shots of each model (it's some 38Mb and, no, I did NOT post it):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
I then cropped out and reformatted each one so you can see these great shots up close (the crops are not to any uniform scales, refer to the above contact sheet for relative sizing); I have not changed the captions but rather commented above each as I deemed appropriate, nor have I verified the AUTHENTICAST model numbers (yet - I sure hope I can turn up that little green ca.-1945 handbook) -

3 - an M7 Priest (not an M&), missing its main gun barrel; 4 - M10A1:
5 - M18 Hellcat Tank destroyer (not M1B); 6 - M3 Gun Motor Carriage (not M8 Howitzer Carrier):
7 - {OK}; 8 - M8 (not MB):
9 - {OK}; 10 - M5A1 (not MSA1) - turret reversed:
11 - M10A1; 12 - turret reversed:
13 - {OK}; 14 - by it's modern, large turret, that's the Churchill Black Prince,
as I recall, with its turret reversed:
15 - {OK}; 16 - main and secondary gun missing (see 21):
17 - Churchill Mk II (not Daimler); 18 - another Churchill Mk II
(not a Covenanter Mk IV, a cruiser tank) [odd - these are identical except for the
post]:
19 - Daimler Armored Car (not Infantry Mk IV); 20 - the famed Matilda:
21 - {OK} (see 16) ["UK" is a post-WWII term]; 22 - both secondary guns (in
separate turrets) bent down:
23 - {REALLY odd*}; 24 - this is a PzKpfw III, but a later version with added
armor:
[* - look at the track on the Pazerjäger, which is nothing more than a special open
turret on an stock
PzKpfw I chassis; the rear sprocket is raised but is NOT raised on the standard
PzKpfw I (?)} (see below - #29)!]
25 - PzKpfw 234{?}, turret reversed; 26 - PzKpfw 38t [Tschechisch (Czech)]:
27 - added armor (Model G is Ausführung G); 28 - {OK}:
29 - PzKpfw I (not III) {see #23, above}; 30 - main gun missing {see #31}:
31 - {see #30}; 32 - turret reversed:
33, 34 - {OK}:
35, 36 - {OK}:
37, 38 - I don't know what the A and B are for; these appear to be one and the same vehicle:
39, 40 - {OK}:
How I wish I could find that little ca.-1945 handbook!
(30 Dec 04)
Paul Jacobs found this undated Teacher Scale 1:500 ship models price list, along with a Comet AUTHENTICAST letter of transmittal dated 25 Jun 1954 (from which I have deleted the name and address for privacy):


(Thumbnailed image - click on picture for larger image)
[Picture courtesy of P. Jacobs - all rights reserved]
(04 Jan 05)
As noted on the main page, I used to make all sorts of things out of shirt cardboard, such as a fortress-cum-castle with an operating drawbridge, from which I got the idea to build a rather large landing ship/craft, sort of like a giant LCVP-cum-LCI-cum-LST, with an operating bow ramp, to transport my AUTHENTICAST tanks and AFVs and troops across the carpet ocean to the carpet beachhead; I found some and here is Fort Cardboard, with an M6 heavy tank crossing the drawbridge behind an M8 Greyhound armored car, with an M3A1 armored car and a Seep standing by (in lens flare):


Now, if only I can find more of these photos.
I got my first Kodak Portralens ca. 1946 (still have it) and mounted it on my Voightlander bellows camera, "arranged" for two belligerent warrior ants to be in the proximity of the M3 Grant, and took a series of pictures of the resultant "battle" [this one (cropped dramatically) turned up - wonder where the others are]:

(24 Feb 05) and
(26/27 Feb 05)
What have we here? Yet another type of WWII ships ID box, one with only eight (8) models in it. Happily, the finder/owner respects them (he works for the U. S. Navy and will display the set). These were found in an attic of a house purchased. The box is labeled "US Miniature Models Japanese Navy Sup. 11" and stamped "1310" on the wood by the hinges. The ships are labeled with their name and have "Comet Metal Products Richmond Hill" stamped on the bottoms of the wood shelves on which the ships are mounted. The names stamped on the underside of the wood shelves the owner originally could read are the Tenryu, Mizuho, Izumo, Hosyo (the aircraft carrier), and Kuma.
Here is the box and the top with the stenciling:

(Feb. 2005 photos by owner - all rights reserved)
NOTE - Hosho is shown as "Hosyo" both on the underside of the shelf AND in the 1945 Price List. The key illustration which follows synopsizes the data:
Now, I depart from my usual posting practice; what follows are cropped pictures of the models as thumbnails, clicking on them will yield the full image of each cubby in top-down and left-right order (the descriptions which underlie the photos are a combination of the cast-in data and information from Paul Jacobs): ![]()
The names are as read from the badly faded inscriptions and the cast-in impressions and as corrected and amplified by Paul Jacobs. ![]()
[ 1 - Jingei (auxiliary, submarine tender) / 5 - Kuma (cruiser, light) ]
![]()
[ 2 - Izumo (cruiser, light) / 6 - Hosho (carrier, aircraft) ]
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[ 3 - Tenryu (cruiser, light) / 7 - Mizuho (carrier, seaplane) ]
![]()
[ 4 - Katori (small cruiser, training) / 8 - No. 13 Class (auxiliary, minesweeper) ]
(Feb. 2005 photos by owner - all rights reserved)
{Cropped thumbnailed images - click on picture for full cubby image}There was something odd about this set to me; some of the ships didn't match the 1945 catalog on cont. page 1, nor did they appear on the 1945 price list on that page. Once Paul Jacobs set me straight, of course, all are right there on the price list or in the catalog [exceptions on the price list: Izumo is listed as a "Coast Defense Ship" {gunboat?} and Mizuho as a Large Seaplane Tender {but Paul says it was a true carrier in that it launched and recovered scout seaplanes, albeit on the water]. In addition, except for the ship models in cubbies 1, 4, and 8, the models are of very old ship designs; I think it may be a very early set, perhaps even the oldest extant. If anyone knows otherwise, please advise me (I'm checking further).
[Originally posted 24 Feb 05 and heavily revised 26/27 Feb 05.]
(24 Feb 05) and
(26/27 Feb 05)
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