Anyone recognize this crest?
Besides a serial number, the crest is the only marking on a bayonet I found.
Scrapping a camper on property I purchased
The bayonets were in a storage compartment
>>33918104
Pic two
>>33918117
Now attached
>>33918104
well if you'd post a pic of the whole bayonet it would be helpful to narrow things down...
>>33918126
Calm down sparky,
The thread had been up three minutes
I'm sorry if I'm not posting fast enough.
>>33918125
>>33918104
That is a polish eagle.
They are obviously not too old
And they look low quality
Prolly the reason some guy used them as a cheap camp knife
>>33918146
Ok let me look that up
>>33918146
This image of a polish crest is from the net
Does not quite match
>>33918104
Looks like an eastern style imperial eagle. Poland, Albania, places like that.
It is a Spanish CETME bayonet.
>>33918156
No I'm sorry OP I was wrong it's a spanish M1964 bayonet. Fitting the CETME rifle.
Fucking spaniards stealing polish symbols...
Cetme bayonet used on the cetme c and fr8
>>33918181
This.
>>33918174
Pic related is spain. They're fucking content thieves.
Quick blerb-
The Spanish M1964 bayonet was used on the 7.62 mm. NATO caliber CETME Model C assault rifle. It was also used on the FR–7 and FR–8 training rifles.
The first version of the CETME, designated Model 1958, did not mount a bayonet. These bayonets are often referred to as the M1969. However, according to Calvó, the official designation was Machete Bayoneta Modelo 1964.
The M1964 bayonet has checkered plastic grips and an unfullered bolo blade. The scabbard has an integral web belt frog. This bayonet has a very unusual rectangular mounting slot. A variant of the CETME Model C bayonet was made for export to Guatemala in 1969 (see Guatemala, above).
CETME is an acronym for Centro de Estudios Técnicos de Materiales Especiales (Center for Technical Studies of Special Materials). CETME was the Spanish government design and development establishment where German designer, Ludwig Vorgrimler, modified the German StG45(M) assault rifle to create the CETME.
The two crests stamped into the blade are the Toledo Coat of Arms and the factory crest of the Instituto Nacional de Industria (INI), Empresa Nacional de Santa Barbara de Industrias Militares (in English, National Industrial Institute, National Business, Santa Barbara Military Industries). Santa Bárbara Sistemas was purchased from the Spanish Government by General Dynamics Corp. in 2001, who operated it until its closure in 2013.
>>33918181
>>33918186
>>33918191
Thanks guys, I'll look at those.
>>33918197
Checkered plastic and no fuller matches
Wow this junk is selling on eBay for $25 a $199 on eBay.
I suspect the guy asking for $199 tells people his shot is rare.
>>33918240
You can find them for 20 dollars. There will always be retards that try to sell their 'antique' shit for 5x what it's worth. Jokes on them though because it usually sits for years and they get lowballed until they're so frustrated they just take it down hue.