Another Hasag No.10, or rather most of one, and this one is closer in many details to Arne Aasgaard's No.11 than to this other No.10. Note the position and nature of the legends and the construction of the feet in particular: The recessed tank base on this stove is also flatter than that on the other example referenced above, and has no markings on it. The most interesting feature of this No.10, however, is the original burner with its rather unusual asymmetric base hexagon. The two parallel, longer, faces, both marked 'GERMANY', are to fit an 18mm spanner; the two pairs of slightly offset faces, presumably not intended for use in either assembly or dismantling would require a 19.5mm spanner to fit! Very difficult to decide where it should be placed chronologically in relation to the other No.10 linked above, earlier or later?
I know from my other Hasags, as well as other gallery entries, that Hasag had some odd leg and trivet forms, and that there was no way to be certain what this stove originally had. So, in line with Hasag's quirky approach to these matters, I have now equipped this one with a viable trivet/leg combination, but with no pretense at replicating anything original: