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09-10-2021 08:48 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
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Hi does this have any maker stamp or number stamp inside the rim of the helmet , for me it looks like a M55 helmet , The Finnish army sold a lot of these off and i think they sometimes still turn up for sell from the Army .The extra holes are found on wartime and post war helmets where a newer liner has been fitted
The markings on the paint will just be the owners name and unit , still a nice helmet for the collection
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Thank you! I bought it from IMA USA who bought them in the thousands off a collector who purchased them from the government. It's a WWII produced shell but I've yet to see a heat stamp or any sort of markings besides the etchings on the helmet itself. It's definitely a war production one but since has been refitted with the m55 updated liner
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With them air vents and no marking its more likely to be a M55 shell
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The thing is, the extra rivet holes on the side were only done during wwii because at the time the Finns used the m1916 style liner. It wasn't until 1955 with the new production that they removed the extra rivet holes and used a more wwii German style liner like this one. Hard to say really there's a lot of conflicting history on these
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At the weekend i will take photos of the Finnish helmets i have , Trust me the extra holes were done post war for the fitting of post war helmets liners, If you look at wartime photos of Finnish troops you will see what i mean no extra holes drilled for the liner, I lived in Finland for 10 years and i have handle over 300 of these helmet over the past 20 years when the Finnish army were selling off their surplus helmets so know what i am talking about
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I believe you know what you're talking about, and obviously have more insight than I do. However I own quite a few of these with and without the extra rivet holes, and I've seen German made ones with heat stamps and all with the extra rivet added. And the post war liner doesn't have the need for the extra holes as the chin strap is attached to the liner itself. And the 1955 produced ones also differ slightly in shape from the German as well as the wartime Finnish ones. Again I'm sure you know more than me and the whole point of this forum is to share knowledge so please help me gain information on these interesting helmets!
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Hi,
I just watched you YT video about this an commented there. But now with better pictures i can really see "SAINT" witch usually is written SA -int. It only mean that its property of the defense forces and you can find it in most of items handled out to conscripts. Finnish army is also called "intti" witch comes from the marking.
Best Regards
Nicklas
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Just a note on the engravings:
SA INT stands for Suomen Armeijan Intendentuuri. Vilanen is the last name of the soldier, Laihia a small town in W Finland an TJ 57 means he has 57 days left to serve. KRHK stands for Kranaatinheitin komppania (Grenade launcher company).
Best, Jan
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