Clarification on Vault Markings...
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Re: Clarification on Vault Markings...
This Lou Gehrig bat is a 1950-60 era H&B professional model bat which would be considered a team index bat in that it does not match Gehrig's personal ordering records...particularly because it would have been made a minimum of 9 years after his death.
I would say that the price reflects a very reasonable alternative for the collector that wants a professional model Gehrig bat for either a collection or to display without paying the $60,000+ that a 1920s H&B would cost.
Looks like a nice bat. -
Re: Clarification on Vault Markings...
Thanks for responding so quickly.
What would a 1950-60's Gehrig H&B look like if it had vault markings... or wouldn't they maintain such a bat after the player's death?Comment
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Re: Clarification on Vault Markings...
Hi,
Because vault marked bats are bats that were returned to the factory to be used as pattern bats a 1950s Gehrig (or any other post-1944 bat for that matter) would not have a vault mark since when it was made it would have been created under the model number system of the mid-1940s.
According to the new Vince Malta book: "Vault marks are a series of letter(s) and number(s) stamped onto the kob and/or barrel end of a bat, used by the manufacturer as a reference from which to pattern future bats. These bats were stored away by the manufacturer in a vault, and retrieved as pattern bats when ordered by a player. Bats stamped with vault marks are usually found in the pre-model number era, before the mid-1940s, and may have been made specifically as pattern bats, or bats returned by players as references for future bat production."
Long story short a 1950s Gehrig bat (if it was a professional model) would already have a model number stamped on the knob making it unnecessary (not to mention) impossible for vault marks to exist on a bat of that era.
*If any of this information is incorrect I would hope that someone will correct me*
ThanksComment
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