That's odd. That sizing doesn't seem to comport with the other German material.dltrial wrote:I was considering buying an armeesattel 25, and in reading about the saddle found that it came in 5 sizes with number 5 being the widest. The natural assumption is that number 1 is the narrowest and each higher number is a bit wider.
However I found a review of the saddle on the German Ebay. Here is a passage from it, followed by a translation from Google translate:
Laut dem Buch "Feldartillerie" von 1904 gibt es folgende Größen :
Nr. 1 für schmalgerippte Pferde mit geradem Rücken
Nr. 2 für schmalgerippte Pferde mit gebogenem Rücken
Nr. 3 für breitgerippte Pferde mit geradem Rücken
Nr. 4 für breitgerippte Pferde mit gebogenem Rücken
Nr. 5 für senkrückige Pferde
According to the book "Field Artillery" from 1904, there are the following sizes:
No. 1 for schmalgerippte horses with a straight back
No. 2 for schmalgerippte horse with curved spine
No. 3 for breitgerippte horses with a straight back
No. 4 for breitgerippte horse with curved spine
No. 5 for horses senkrückige
What I infer from this is that Numbers 1 and 2 are the same width of tree and that numbers 3 and 4 are the same width of tree, the difference between the pairs is the front to back curvature of the tree. In this case both 3 and 4 would be medium tree saddles and only 5 would be a wide tree.
I cannot myself translate the untranslated words so I am not certain. Could someone who is familiar with these saddles clear this up? Also if someone knows, what is the angle between the points of the tree for the 4 and 5? What I mean is that the angle between the points of the tree on medium tree english saddles is about 90 degree (45 deg to the center line). My horses would require a considerably wider saddle.
By the way the said review states that there was also a size 6 produced in some years that was even wider. Is that true and are any ever seen?
Derek
Can anyone resolve this?