ORIGINAL GERMAN HELMET SHELL M35 SIZE Q62, PTETTY VISIBLE MARKINGS. COLOR AND RIVETS ARE RESTORED REPRODUCTION, TO CAMO NORMANDY”ELITE FORCES”. THIS IS NORMANDY CAMO”ELITE FORCES” HELMET. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE FEEL FREE ASK. The item “GERMAN HELMET M35 SIZE Q62 CAMO WW2 STAHLHELM” is in sale since Wednesday, April 11, 2018. This item is in the [Continue]
Complete original WW2 German Afrika Korps Luftwaffe pith helmet. The tan canvas crown and brim are solid. Perfect brown trim around the edge. Leather sweatband in good condition. Green cloth on the underside in excellent condition. Badges in nice condition. Green cloth is excellent, gray felt is perfect. Red liner in great shape but dirty. [Continue]
2X ORIGINAL GERMAN HELMETS LARGE SIZES, SHELL M35 SIZE 66 AND M40 SIZE Q66. M35 SIZE 66 (HELMET HAS BEEN MEASURED) VISIBLE ONLY SERIAL N. O, M40 VISIBLE SERIAL N. O + SIZE NUMBER. BOTH HELMETS IN GOOD CONDITION, SHELLS ARE HEALTHY WITHOUT ANY DEFECTS. ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE FEEL FREE ASK. The item “GERMAN HELMET [Continue]
Original WWII German Army Elite M40 helmet with battle damage. The helmet had little outside finish, but what paint there is is dark green Elite? The helmet liner is complete and marked size 58, only half of the original chin strap is present. There is a bullet hole in the left rear that went through [Continue]
This is a vintage WW II German M42 Helmet. Helmet is a late war make and in good shape. No markings or decals on the outside. Inside are two stamps along the edge CKL 66 and below that 5396. (Manufacturers marks) Liner is in poor shape, half of the leather suspension pieces tips are ripped [Continue]
RARE Vintage WW2 German NSKK Helmet. MADE in Berlin by Karl Heisler. GREAT AND RARE HELMET. Leather in excellent condition. Size: No marks but it is a Large to a XLarge size… For those who love history, past memories and heritage of the most dominant aviation, motorcycling and motoring themes. Specialize in historical headgear: goggles, [Continue]
26618, as used by many German pilots throughout WW2. During WW1, most pilots quickly realized the need for protective headgear due to the cold weather effects while in an open cockpit. As no headgear was readily available, pilots were forced to utilize commercially produced leather motorcycle and automobile helmets. During WW2, the German military produced [Continue]