Thanx James I am having a lot of fun collecting post war helmets from around the globe just added a couple fresh new lids to the collection yesterday .
Regards Mark
Thanx James I am having a lot of fun collecting post war helmets from around the globe just added a couple fresh new lids to the collection yesterday .
Regards Mark
the width of the black rubber tubing varied by the individual, notice some soldiers had a very large piece of tubing on their helmets.
The tubing that goes around the rim is of a later era though. Like with the version of Mark.
Mark, could you please post the link for the on line reference, I would be interested to read it, personally I would be very surprised if there was any formal regulation related to tube width, you can see pictures from all periods with all widths, I always assumed it depended on the slice of the inner tube you acquired.
Thanks,
Steve.
Hi Steve sorry bad choice of words I should have been more clear I found on line referance in the form of period images and for the most part the width does appear to be smaller on the pictures I examined from the 67 period at least with the para Mk II helmets.
Regards Mark
Thanks for the reply...the difference might be just a fashion statement....
Steve.
Good point Steve as to the reasoning behind my own decision to cut the tubing a little larger was so that I could tuck the camo net in behind it as it was a rather large net so that I could do away with cutting it and adding a string to hold it in place.
And personal choice as I liked the way it looked with the wider band.
Regards Mark
I have had this standard British mk11 for a while now but of yet haven't posted it here ,i did initially post it in the British and Commonwealth section but the general consensus was I'ts a post war issue to Israel ,unfortunately no liner present on this Rubery and Co helmet dated 1940, just noticed whilst uploading the pictures I'm showing the rear of the helmet at the front
Last edited by James C; 02-03-2022 at 07:32 PM.
Very interesting display James.
Is that a hebrew stamp on the battledress?
In the very early postwar years many of the MKII's and MKIII's weren't refurbished until later on. This is not regulation or "fashion" but simple practicality. Why fix something that isn't broken yet.
This might be one of them. Very hard to say.
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