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    ID help

    Hello brothers
    I have a heer ID plaque, I know it's not a special ID but I don't want any fake in my collection and I thougt it was a good one....
    Until a guy of a militaria shop of my town told me that it was fake because "germans only wore iron IDs on WW2"
    (this one is alluminium) any opinions are wellcome

    #2

    Comment


      #3
      Whoever said that to you talks chinese. Aluminium ID existed.
      Yours stands for Batallón de Reserva de Infantería n9, primera compañía.
      The low soldiers number 232 denotes that he was not a simple soldier,could have been an NCO.
      Sorry,no more info that can provide you with.
      Viva España!

      Comment


        #4
        AhAhaH ok, any idea of where this unit served??

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          #5
          Originally posted by Doc_panzerjager View Post
          Until a guy of a militaria shop of my town told me that it was fake because "germans only wore iron IDs on WW2"
          Hello

          This is utter nonsense !

          At the beginning of the war, alluminium was standart, than in the later war, zinc became standart.
          Iron dogtags (normal Iron an stainless steel) were rare as dogtags, but they still exists. I think only 1-3% of german soldiers have worn iron dogtags. Over 90 % have worn zinc and alluminium.


          Here some infos about the bataillon:


          Infanterie-Ersatz-Bataillon 9

          1. Aufstellung:

          * 28.8.1939 in Potsdam, wird 11.9.1942 umgegliedert in Panzergrenadier-Ersatz-Bataillon 9.


          2. Unterstellung:

          Division 153 Ersatztruppe für 23. Infanterie-Division





          Remember !
          This was the training unit of the soldier, not the field (combat) unit. This dogtag unit has nothing to do, with his field unit.




          At last:

          The dogtag is original. 101 %




          Best regards, Fronti

          Comment


            #6
            Many many thanks Fronti
            I apreciate your interesting information
            Cheers!!

            Comment


              #7
              aluminum dog tag

              Fronti is correct. I have about 100 dogtags in my collection with almost half of them being aluminum, almost the other half zinc and only a handfull in steel. If you are uncertain about a dogtag it is often best to stay away from it. A tip on original aluminum dogtags: look at the eyelets for wear as the material was rather soft. If the cord is still on it (or was on it) it was often wrapped around the dogtag after the war and the salt in the cord (from sweat) corrodes the aluminum. You will often see "stripes" of corrosion from this chemical reaction. Don't buy highly corroded or "dug" dogtags as these are often looted from graves and the greed to make money on these "dug" dogtags often means that the soldier will never be identified!

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                #8
                Ok Pzv thanks for the information and the advices, I'll take care
                BTW I bought the cord by separate

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by PzV View Post
                  [...]Don't buy highly corroded or "dug" dogtags as these are often looted from graves and the greed to make money on these "dug" dogtags often means that the soldier will never be identified![...]
                  Thats not right.

                  99% of all grounddugs are not from graves, they are out of POW camps and were thrown away by the soldiers.

                  But you are right, wenn you say, that heavily corroded dogtags could be from graves. But these "gravetags" are not normal corroded, they are corroded in another way. (black marbled/marmorate)

                  And you are right, that it is a shame, to steel a identity of a fallen soldier.


                  Best regards, Fronti

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Hi fronti, any picture of the diferences of a grave found ID and another one that doesn't comes from a grave? I think that it's an interesting point if we don't want to make the enormous mistake of leaving a soldier "missing" forever
                    Best regards
                    Doc

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Here is a pic of the 3 types:
                      Top, Iron
                      Middle, Aluminum
                      Bottom, Zinc
                      Hope that shows that the guy you talked with is not informed!
                      Regards,
                      -Tony
                      Attached Files

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Of course it helps, thanks a lot
                        I think that guy only wanted to hurt me
                        Doc

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