I have a 94-5 ( or is it 95-4 ?? ) supposedly from Attu, looks basically unissued except for handtools missing. I read that Japanese equipment from Attu had been moved to Cold Bay and then around 1948, taken out and buried, no souvenirs allowed. It seems to me at wartime they still would have wanted Japanese radios back East for anaysis, but maybe they already had enough war captures ?
Anyway i know the "No Souvenirs" policy was not that thorough because one other person said he had a binoculars from the same stash.
Seems remarkable though. It was exhibited at hamfairs in Alaska but by the time i acquired it, no one who could verify the provenance was still around. 
The 6 MHz freqs quartzes in the Attu radio could maybe be explained by
1. absolute lack of trees for antenna support for longer antennas
2. no intervailing jungle to attenuate higher freqs
After the downsizing here, i need to put this set on the air.
-Hue Miller
Sent from my Galaxy



>Hue -
Right now I'm reading a good book on the Aleutians campaign, and it struck me that in addition to the crash-landed carrier Zero fighter that was recovered earlier, the later withdrawal of the Japanese might have left intelligence material and equipment behind, including radios.  Your observation fits right into my speculation.

Thousand-Mile War: World War II in Alaska and the Aleutians
   by Brian Garfield

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0912006838/



> Steve WD8DAS  
--------------------------------------------------------------------  
Radio is your best entertainment value.  
> ------------------------------------------------------------------