Is this Stahllelm real or fake?

yorgi

CGN frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
151   0   0
Location
Toronto, Ontario
Was recently invited to a backyard BBQ. My non-milsurp-collecting host liked my CGN T-shirt and asked if I would like to see his German military helmet he bought some years ago.

The owner does not know if the helmet is original or not, my knowledge on the subject is sorely lacking....

So what say your learned experts, fake or real?
 

Attachments

  • received_809927783049031.jpg
    received_809927783049031.jpg
    103.8 KB · Views: 626
  • received_515685719509361.jpg
    received_515685719509361.jpg
    114 KB · Views: 622
  • received_1480192278980655.jpg
    received_1480192278980655.jpg
    104.7 KB · Views: 623
  • received_545960960081624.jpg
    received_545960960081624.jpg
    71.5 KB · Views: 622
  • received_1019335292215230.jpg
    received_1019335292215230.jpg
    74.1 KB · Views: 621
  • received_1518638308470248.jpg
    received_1518638308470248.jpg
    71.5 KB · Views: 623
  • received_387165716162394.jpg
    received_387165716162394.jpg
    73.7 KB · Views: 623
Looks good to me, my only concern would be the loose headliner split rivets. They're pressed tight at the factory and don't 'work their way loose' by themselves. Either than that, from this side of the computer screen no major alarm bells go off, it checks all the boxes as being authentic.
 
Looks good to me, my only concern would be the loose headliner split rivets. They're pressed tight at the factory and don't 'work their way loose' by themselves. Either than that, from this side of the computer screen no major alarm bells go off, it checks all the boxes as being authentic.

They work themselves loose with combat and use. Any true veteran will have loose pins. Have you seen how they work? They are not a solid method of attachment in my Opinion. There are tens of thousands of helmets with loose pins. The truth is to look at the pins for tan wrong and being retensioned..
 
Looks good to me, my only concern would be the loose headliner split rivets. They're pressed tight at the factory and don't 'work their way loose' by themselves. Either than that, from this side of the computer screen no major alarm bells go off, it checks all the boxes as being authentic.

Liner could've been replaced in the field, there is a guy in my WW2 reenactment unit who does it with hand tools. He restores German brain buckets for fun. Does awesome job too.
 
Back
Top Bottom