Originally posted by Bernhard
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Here's some more interesting food for thought on these source identified helmet parts used for these "Czech-German" tan helmets :
The so-called "German" parts geography:
-Rivets (Split pins or Splinte) came from "MSS, Mathias Salcher und Söhne Wagstadt", = Sudetenland...in Czech territoty it's in Czech "Matyáš Salcher a synové, a.s."
-Liners/chinstraps from "G. SINGER, KLATTAU Klattau" was a German re-named (Czech) city in the Sudetenland in Czech territory...
-Liners from "B&C Litzmannstadt" in (occupied) Poland! Litzmannstadt, the German name for Lodz was the second largest ghetto in Poland, after the Warsaw ghetto.
It was turned into a major industrial center for making German war supplies. These liner band were most likely made by the hands of Jewish slave laborers...so SS controlled.
All the parts were coming from (SS controlled) occupied Poland and Czech territories...Fits the bill for war time production, geographically it all makes sense!
If these were post war (late 40's-50's) rebuilds for the Egyptian army, with scrapped together parts, is it a mear coincidence that these parts were concentrated in those areas?
and from known war time locally concentrated supplier sources? as opposed to post war reproduced (using Czech made copy parts without German language, RBNr etc...)?
Can any other parts on these be identified by owners of such helmets?
So yes "German parts" but in fact German parts from war time Czech-Polish suppliers, not just slapped together post war with whatever parts, from where ever!!
To me this is indicative of war time production...and the paint is einheitz farbe vehicle tan (Dunbkelgelb), as used by Skoda for Czech made German vehicles...
Originally posted by Bernhard
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The SS depot Jung Bunzlau on the outskirts of Prague, where Skoda was located using this dunkelgelb "einheitzfarbe" vehicle paint ? No way, it's Egyptian spec paint!!!
These helmets were dismissed because they did not have the proper DAK tan paint, but its from a different time span, post 1943 era rebuilds...nothing to do with DAK!
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