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Post Info TOPIC: Looking for Information, Photos etc. Infantry Shields, Creep Tanks and Body Armor


Hero

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Looking for Information, Photos etc. Infantry Shields, Creep Tanks and Body Armor
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Gentleman


Hello, I am doing an extensive study on Infantry Shields, creep tanks, and body armor used during the War, any and all information, pictures etc would be greatly appreciated. Information is needed on all countries.


All the Best


Tim R



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Field Marshal

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here is an italian soldier with body armor

I find this picture quite funny, plus he would have had a trench club with him!


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Field Marshal

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Tim, I have a copy of the older Osprey title "Flak Jackets", which has a few pages of text and a plate about the Great War; also the newer "Italian Army, 1914-18" which has a plate and some photos of the Arditi. If this would be helpful, let me know and I will forward some scans to you. 

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Hero

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Rhomboid, I would appreciate any and all help, Thank you very much.


Eugene, Thanks a million.


All the best


Tim R



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Hero

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Hope these are of some use


Paul



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Legend

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Tim - I don't know if you've seen Brassey's World War One British Army by Stephen Bull, but it's got a couple of pages on body armour and so on. Several patent ones plus the Dayfield, which was issued in quite large numbers. That looks like it in Picture 2 above. There's also the Cruise chain-mail visor which was supposed to dangle from the front of the helmet, but made the wearer feel sick, for optical reasons.


Somewhere I've got a pic of a German wheeled infantry shield and a British one mounted on a Pedrail. Any use to you?



-- Edited by James H at 03:52, 2006-12-31

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Hero

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Paul, Thanks a million, those will come in handy.


 


James, Thank you, I would appreciate those photo's if you can find them, Also I will look for that book.


Thanks Guys.


All the Best


Tim R



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Lieutenant-Colonel

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German armoured mask:







 


 


 



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Lieutenant-Colonel

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British body armor:



Best regards from Spain


 



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Legend

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Have U got these Tim?

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Hero

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Centurion, Thank you, and yes I have them, But I appreciate the thought.


 


Thanks to every one for your kind help.


  Eugene, I need some Russian stuff, Help!!!!!


All the best


Tim R



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Legend

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Tim, I'll scan those infantry shield pics asap. Do you know about the experimental Belgian steel helmet and visor? I've got a pic.

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Hero

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Scan away my friend, I appreciate all information.


All the best


Tim R



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Legend

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Bear with me while we clear up the Christmas detritus and get back into the swing of things.


But in the meantime, take a look at this. Total news to me:


    www.steelpots.com/sppages/model%202.htm



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Corporal

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Hi,


These pictures are from a new book on Austro-Hungarian stormtroopers. It says that Austro-Hungarian troopers did not use body-armour, only Italians experimented with it (on the A-H fronts) with not much success as it made movement very difficult. However, there are these pictures of infantry shields in use.




Sniper with a shield by his leg:



A-H army used two types of helmets: the so-called Berndorfer produced by the Arthur Krupp Metallwarenfabrik A.G. in Berndorf, and the 16M German pattern helmet which was produced by the Manfred Weiss Works in Budapest under licence. Both could be strenghtened with Stirnshildes (forehead shields) for extra protection, but these were only suggested to used by machine gunners and static guards as it also made movement very difficult because of the weight. On the other hand it could withstand smal arms bullets.





-- Edited by McGuba at 19:43, 2007-01-04

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Hero

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McGuba


   Thank you very much for the information and photos, By the way do you have anything on Austro-Hungarian Flame Throwers used by the stormtroopers.


Thanks again.


all the best


Tim R



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Corporal

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Sorry for being late...


From the book:


In 1917 an Austro-Hungarian sturmbattalion should had:


-         four assault companies


-         one or two machine gunner companies


-         a mountain gun battery with four guns (presumably 7,5cm M15)


-         an infantry gun battery with four guns (presumably 3,7cm M15)


-         a “Kampfmittelgruppe” (medium battle group?) with four medium grenade launchers  


       and  four medium mortars


-         a flamethrower squad with six flamethrowers


-         a sapper company


An assault company had four officers and 135 non-commissioned officers and soldiers.


There was a directive that all infantry divisions should had a sturm/assault battalion by late 1917, but the schedule was extended to January, 1918.


 


On flamethrowers: Austro-Hungarian sturmtruppen (German) / rohamcsapat (Hungarian) units preferred to use the lighter, portable versions. The first type, the 1915 M. 50 litres flamethrower was ready for use in January 1915, but it proved to be too heavy for the assault units. It used different oil derivatives as flammable fluid. Its effective range reached 25-60 meters. The lighter, 1915 M. 22 litres and 1915 M. 15 litres versions appeared from 1916, and were better suited for use with the sturmtruppen.


 


As it can be seen on the pictures even these lighter versions needed at least two “rohamista” (Hungarian, informal, should be “assaultist”) soldiers to operate.


 






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Legend

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The pictures don't show when I open your posting.

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Corporal

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Strange. I tried it on different computers and I could see them.

Nevertheless, I uploaded them to my under-develompment K. u. k. General homepage:

http://kukgen.fw.hu/

It is in the Galleries/Infantry section.



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Legend

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Got it now thanks

I can see why they needed body armour with a trench system where the fire step exposed so much of the soldier above the parapet!

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