Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Suslowicz
The NATO Stock Number will be an "after the fact" issue, and does not reflect the actual country of origin
Chris.
[2] I have a WS19 'B' set aerial lead (No.3) ex-Italian surplus with an Italian NSN on the label, but a Pye metal tag with the original ZA stores code.
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The ZA number predates NATO so I suspect Italy took a WW2 part number and assigned a NATO number to it. What that tells us is that no other country uses that part (if playing by the rules). The first country to assign a number is usually the country of origin (in most cases). It defeats the purpose to have more than one NSN for the same part.
http://www.nato.int/structur/ac/135/...sh/e_1-6-5.htm
David, You said it had a broad arrow mark. Was it only an arrow or a "C" broad arrow? If the former then certainly a UK product.