On KM visors, I have no problem with oilcloth trim, such as this:
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KM Visor Trim Question
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Originally posted by DonC View PostStone, can you post the rest of the lid with the plastic trim (i know it is not really plastic)
Don
Here you go. The underside of the visor is definitely oilcloth, but the visor trim and oakleaves gap always concern me:NEC SOLI CEDIT
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KM Schirmmützen are non my main interest but I have no problem with the vinylic (that looks plastic) trim on LW caps.....so I think they can be considered original on KM visor caps....
You can easily see them on period LW portraits....but I didn't ever make a deep research on period KM portraits......
Regards
Giorgio
Bordo telato = oilcloth trim
Bordo vinile = Vinylic trim
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Originally posted by stonemint View PostHere is another oddity of the "plastic" trimmed visor--the band seam is on the side of the hat:
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Those are nice photos posted by Giorgio. Don't know if this means anything at all, but found this "vinyl history" on the internet:
"In 1913, German inventor Friedrich Heinrich August Klatte took out a patent on PVC. His method used polymerization of vinyl chloride with sunlight.
The most significant breakthrough occurred in the United States when the company BFGoodrich hired the industrial scientist Waldo Semon to develop a synthetic replacement for the increasingly costly natural rubber. His experiments again produced polyvinyl chloride. However, the material was threatened by the recession in the 1920s and it was under threat of abandonment that Semon conceived the idea of PVC as a water resistant coating for fabrics. Sales took off quickly with a rapidly expanding product range. Demand accelerated again during the Second World War, when PVC quickly replaced traditional material to insulate wiring on military ships."
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Hi Guys,
Just at the office, cut of a small piece of the bill, the "plastic" part, the white inner gauze and the black backside and burnt it, all are non synthetic and burns to ashes.
If anyone have any doubt, we can cut of another small piece tomorrow and film the whole process and put it online.
The bill is 100%, the material is quite soft but burns to Ashes and no lump, so we have no doubt it is a wartime made bill.
Cheers
Peter
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