Peacoat said:No, CB, it was Kojax' lambskin G-1 that got damaged. I have a real G-1.
Peacoat said:I have a current issue Excelled G-1, 2001 contract, about 6 years old and a shearling insulated LL Bean. I was looking for a 1966 or 1967 G-1 and came across this one at a good price. I bought it to give to a friend of mine, but it was too small for him. Fit me OK (a little large) so I kept it. I don't know how many years it takes for goat to show some signs of wear, but this one hasn't started showing any yet. Still looks new out of the box.
Satori said:If you want the best of both worlds then the AN-J3 is the jacket. I had an original which I part exchange with Aero a few years back; I'm not too sure what happened to it as it didn't seem to appear on their sales page, although they have (or had) two almost identical jackets for sale in smaller sizes (Mine was a 42).
Edward said:They've made at least one 42..... just this evening I won an ebay auction, and am now at the nervous stage of waiting for the seller to come back to me with confirmation of postage from Switzerland (end price, fwiw, was GBP113ish - currently, about USD170 or so). There is a small damage to the lining which I will need to sew up, and a small part of the leather where the finish has rubbed off, both easily sorted. The zip has also been replaced from the original, though I doubt that will concern me (an easy fix at a later stage anyhow). For that price....
FWIW, the seller says in his blurb that he is only aware of two of them made by Aero, including his. I'm sure there have been others, but clearly it is a jacket not in the highest demand - long behind ither the A2 or the G1 types. I'm actually really looking forward to comparing it to my Aero AN6552 - it'll be interesting to see where the differences lie, aside from the obvious difference in collar. Moving to one intermediate leather flying jacket common to all services was a logical decision.... I know Arnold put the kabosh on that for reasons of cost and material availability, though I do wonder (much as I actually do very much like the B10) whether the US Forces might ultimately have saved in the long run by going with one common design. I do wonder why the Navy stuck with leather when the USAAF went to cloth, why not both? Was it as simple as different bods making the decision, perhaps also the Navy having a much smaller flight arm than the army?
Satori said:If your AN-J3 is like the repro Aero offered then it will have an A-2 type wind flap and epalettes; other than that the construction was very M422a/G-1 like.
I seem to recall Ken stating that they had AN-J3 labels made up for repros when they were offering them.
Eric
galvestonokie said:i know... without pix... try these of the altered 55J14/ANJ3. bob
http://s150.photobucket.com/albums/s114/galvestonokie/55J14/
Fletch said:You must be in good shape, because the typical G-1 doesn't feel very full-cut if you aren't. Most are decidedly v-shaped - free moving thru the shoulders and chest, but cut lean in the waist.