Sunday 28 March 2010

Danish M48 helmet / Hjelm M48 ( US M1 helmet and Austrian clone)

Danish M48 clone helmet - made in 1965 by USCH
Medic helmet cover from 1963
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In the first years after WWII, the Danish army used three main types of helmets. The British "turtle" helmet + the Mk II and the Swedish M/37. We tried to produce our own helmet, the M/46, however the Danish army decided to introduce the American M1 helmet instead. It was cheap and well made. It remained the standard combat headgear in the Danish army until 1992 when the first kevlar helmet, produced by Schubert in Germany, and the first flak jacket was introduced.

The M1's were in the beginning surplus WWII helmets. A small Danish production run was begun in 1957. These helmets were made of magnetic steel, and came with a Bakelite liner. All of them went to the civil defence, since they were deemed unusable by the army. In 1965 the Danish army received the first German and Austrian produced M1 clones. These helmets are known as the M/48-65.

The Danish M1 clones were produced by:

Austria: Heinrich Ulbricht's Witwe, Schwanenstadt (stamp: U.SCH)

Germany: Linnemann Schnatzer, Ahlen (stamp: LS)

Germany: Busch Vereinigten Deutsche Nickelwerke AG Schwerte (stamp: VDN)

In the beginning the helmet liner were the old "resin" ones, but later, the old WWII helmets and clones were given a hard plastic liner produced from 1963 in Denmark by Dansk Kunststof Industri - DKI. They were of a higher quality that did not dissolve in the humid Danish weather like the resin ones. They liners were made of fibreglass impregnated with coloured polystyrene, and were made in three different colours: Green (army), grey (civil defence) and blue (navy). Later DKI produced a high visibility orange liner for the Civil defence. The liners were able cope with temperatures ranging from -30 to +40 degrees Celsius. DKI also sold the same helmet liner to the Norwegians, when they introduced the M1 helmet, as the M/58.

The helmets were usually used together with a cotton helmet net. The net was very similar to the US M/44 net.  All webbing parts were in a olive green shade, and all metal work on buckles etc were kept in brass. The helmets were made of a non-magnetic metal, the so called Mangalloy because of its high impact strength and resistance to abrasion. - WIKI: Mangalloy

If you want additional information on the M1 helmets, visit Mannie's blog.
http://www.combathelmets.blogspot.com/
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First helmet is a M1 -Front seam helmet made by McCord Radiators late in the war - late 1940s.
Heat stamp: 926A
Liner is of the 1963 DKI type, and the chinstraps are made of cotton webbing.
Colour: "apple green"
Buckles: Brass.












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Austrian clone shell made by USCH in 1965
Same type of liner, made by DKI.
Webbing straps on the liner is a cotton / nylon mix.
The chinstrap on the shell is the US M/73, with chin cup. It is made out of nylon and cotton webbing.














Tuesday 23 March 2010

Danish army insignia. Pre. WWII

(Click on the picture to enlarge it)

First row (from top to bottom) with the forage caps and pilot wings:
First forage cap is officers and connets.
Second forage cap is officiants and sergeants.
Third and last forage cap, is other ranks.
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First row (cap badges) from left to right:First one: Cap badge general rank (General)
Second one: Cap badge senior officers.
Third one: National Cockade
Fourth one: Other officers and Officiants
Last one: Cap badge NCO's and other ranks.
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Second row: Officer shoulder boards:
#1: General
#2: Lieutenant general
#3: Major General
#4: Colonel
#5: Lieutenant colonel
#6: Captain (Reserves)
#7: Captain
#8: Lieutenant
#9: Lieutenant (Reserves)
#10 2nd Lieutenant
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Third and last row - Shoulder boards:
#1: Corps officiant
#2: Staff officiant
#3: Senior officiant
#4: Officiant
#5: Connet
#6: Sergeant major
#7: Sergeant
#8: Corporal
#9: Lance corporal
#10: Helmet badge
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The picture is taken from: "Lærebog for Hærens Menige" - that belonged to my grandfather.