need opinion on my Tornister Affe backpack, nice and lots of fur but is he original or not and dose someone have a picture of him in use
he is marked warschau 1942 cant read the markersmark
need opinion on my Tornister Affe backpack, nice and lots of fur but is he original or not and dose someone have a picture of him in use
he is marked warschau 1942 cant read the markersmark
Looks original to me, but i couldn't find a picture of it in use.
Best Regards
Vegard T.
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Looking for militaria from HKB 31./977, HKB 32./977, HKB 38./977 or militaria related to Norway
good original,,,
Original, no question, Shame some-one has cut the straps off that connect to the D-ring at the bottom leaving only the cartrage case hooks at the front. they are also fitted upside down I think?
regards
Jock
Hello,
The carrying straps of this M39 Tornister are saboted & wrongly positioned (as Jock mentioned), but it also lacks the leather tab on the front panel (meant to retain the lower part of the A-frame).
Thanks
The sacrifice of life is a huge sacrifice, there is only one that is more terrible, the sacrifice of honor
In Memoriam :
Laurent Huart (1964-2008)
Here's a pic for you
This was the closest I came to "Tornister in use" in my photo collection. . .
(The Tornisters on this photo, packed for a long trip I would guess, being slightly over packed )
You have a nice Tornister (M1934 pack)
The "Tornister 34" was adopted in early November 1934... and in 1939, the new M1939 pack was introduced...
The only big difference between the two is that the "M34" had the support straps, and the "M39" had two "D" rings,
so that the pack could be fitted directly on to the support straps..
Butt, the packs come in all sorts of variants, with differences (small) because of the different factories..
Hello,
This is incorrect. The Tornister that opened this thread is a saboted M39, not M34. The M39 Tornister was issued with small tabs/hook for the Y-straps, but it was also issued with carrying straps for troops that didn't have Y-straps. Not all german soldiers did have Y-straps, especially early in the war.
Considering the features of the haversacks on the R.A.D. picture posted, those could be the M07/13 type
Thanks
The sacrifice of life is a huge sacrifice, there is only one that is more terrible, the sacrifice of honor
In Memoriam :
Laurent Huart (1964-2008)
1 is one of the D-rings meant to secure the top part of the A-frame.
2 is where should be the other D-ring...(the drawing is not a success i'm afraid)
3 is where should be the missing leather tab meant to secure the lower part of the A-frame...as seen on the photo from an Angolia's book posted by reneblacky
Thanks
The sacrifice of life is a huge sacrifice, there is only one that is more terrible, the sacrifice of honor
In Memoriam :
Laurent Huart (1964-2008)
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