As an old "Steel Pot" Marine, I appreciate the interesting information about this famously shaped combat helmet. This is what I wore during two tours as a grunt in Vietnam. Thanks.
God yes I remember my M1 Steel "Skid-Lid". An old Korean era Sergeant Major in my first permeant party unit (2nd Armored Div. Fort Hood Tx.) showed me how to remove the interior paint, prepare it and "season" the steel shell for cooking, and also how to maintain it and prevent rusting. Treat it like you would a good quality cast iron skillet and it will serve you well. It was the do everything tool (helmet, wash basin, cooking pot and entrenching tool, make shift club, or sitting stool), try that with a modern Kevlar helmet. I still have mine, when they were being removed from service I had our supply sergeant bill me for a field damage/lose and was given a receipt of purchase to own it as surplus.
As one who wore both the M1 and the kevlar the steel pot had many advantages. It made a great “sink” for assorted uses. The liners were useful too in hot climates
As a retired Army Officer, the four things I hated giving up through 32 years of active service, my M-14, my M-1 Helmet, my Colt .45, and my Jeep. Thank God I was long retired and missed the greatest travesty, taking the Black Beret away from the 75th Ranger Regiment. The Tan one The Ranger Association sent me has no meaning....
I only have one M1 helmet. But it was my helmet in jump school in 1977. Glad I have it. It still has my trainee number (T173) on masking tape on the front.
Dear Dr mark Felton, I have things to do , a job, a family, house chores . Yet here I sit day after day one video leads to another must watch and darkness falls nothing done but a history full of mark Felton productions . Thanks for making my days and ruining them all at the same time!
I still have my father's helmet liner from WW2. My brother wore the M1 in Vietnam. He said it bounced when he ran, and he had to hold it with one hand.
I was issued my first M1 helmet in October, 1960 and turned in my last in 1984. I did not have one in all of my assignments but I was always issued one when assigned to a combat unit. In the Berlin Brigade every soldier and every officer had two helmet liners, one to wear under their steel "pots" and the other, called a Spandau for parades, guard duty, and other formal occasions. The Spandau.was painted dark blue with applied decals. At training centers Cadre wore painted helmet liner to differentiate them from the trainees.
With a few minor modifications the M1 was also turned into a good paratrooper helmet. A different chinstrap at the very least. By my time we had an additional foam pad at the back which I doubt the US had in WW 2.
I started in the US Army back in 1986 issued with one. By 1988 the Army finally went to all Kevlar helmets. I retired in 2009 with the modified MICH helmet. I still have and M1, PASGT, and MICH in my collection.
My father went in the Marines back in '81. He was Marine Force Recon, he started off with a modified M1 for airborne use and transitioned to the PASGT around the time of Grenada. He liked the PASGT for it's protection, but was always partial to the M1 for the way it wore.
We used an M1 variant in the Canadian Army until the CG 634 helmet was adopted in 1997. I still have my old parachutist's helmet with the reversible "Mitchell" pattern camouflage cover and jumper's helmet liner. The special jumper's liner featured a second chin strap and a foam rubber pad at the back of the head, just in case.
Wore the M1 in the Air Force ( security police) in the late 70s and through all my Army guard service in the 80s. Was not issued a Kevlar until we were getting ready to ship out to Saudi for the first Gulf. I don't know what others experienced, but I guess the California ARNG was in no hurry to equip its units with the Kevlar helmets, even though they were in use by the regular forces several years before, until they absolutely had to.
the m1 type helmet was in use in the Norwegian army until the late 90s and early 2000s, together with other outdated equipment and weapons, such as the mp40 and Suomi m31 in use til 1995
Man in the 1970s and 1980s I wore my M-1 Helmet . I cooked in it, shaved in it and even took a BATH in it. :) Thanks Mark, 1974 US Army Boot Camp: Today I wear a scare across the top of my nose from an M-1 Steel Pot creasing me one night. :) We were at Ft Polk LA. Night ambush training. We walked into an ambush and was told to "GET DOWN" in the prone position. Well I did, and the rim of the steel pot 'bit me' right across my schnooz...LOL If I recall correctly, ours didnt have a chin strap on it, so it just rattled around on top of your head. :) .... Us old US Army Veterans sure like your videos and you preserving our History! Thanks brother - Herb A Staff Sgt. in the US Army ..........."Cavalry Scout"
Mr. Felton, Sir, thank you for this video. Collecting military helmets it's one of my hobbies, and so far I was able to gather a modest 30-and-something helmets, from various countries and armies, most of them original pieces issued during and after WW 2 (+ some replicas of WW1 helmets). I have two US M1s in my collection, one made in 1956 and another in 1979 (bought both of them via ebay). This being said, I hope you will consider the idea of making more videos about WW2 and Cold War helmets - some of them have fascinating stories! For example, the DDR (German Democratic Republic) helmet, designed by Nazis and rejected by Hitler due to propaganda reasons (!), adopted by Eastern Germany only because Hitler refusal :-) and used up to the collapse of Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall. Or the Romanian helmet of WW2, bought from Holland before (and used during) the war to Stalingrad and back, then replaced by the Soviet helmet in 50s, only to be re-designed and reintroduced by the Romanian Socialist (and nationalist) regime of Nicolae Ceausescu in 60s, and finally replaced in 2000s by the NATO standard, modern kevlar-made helmet. Thanks again for your video(s). And best from Bucharest!
In the Army 1967 we wore just the liners in training, much lighter. I wore the MI in the Infantry Vietnam. We had a camo cover for which the Army provided an elastic band at the base to keep it neat but the Marines did not (about the only way to tell the services apart from combat pictures). Also we never employed the chin strap but buckled it behind the helmet even though that meant the helmet could fall off when running and jumping around.
I remember during the Grenada campaign, there were US troops equipped with the M1 helmet and then other troops who were wearing the then new Kevlar one.
Cool vid. I used to have one of these exact helmets I received as B-day gift when I was about tenbut sold it at garage sale when I was teenager. I still haven't forgiven myself.
My steel pot had a chrome liner which I didn't know about until I pulled them apart several days later when I was cleaning it. I immediately knew it was for honor guard or parade ground use. Sadly though since it came to me all as 1 piece, when I separated the 2 there was a heavy single trail of blood from the right mid rear up to almost the crown on the outside of the liner. I later found out it had been in storage since vietnam until I got it in 1984. Have no idea whose it was or what happened to them. Odd, I'm sure a parade liner was uncommon to have outside of a select group.
McCord Radiator was located in Detroit and made many products for cars including mufflers and gaskets. They were perfectly suited for helmet production due to their expertise in stamping steel. Besides the helmets, their advertising signs, clocks and thermometers are highly prized by collectors.
My father has a M1 with some bullet holes in it. Found it in Nijmegen after the battle in 1944, when he was a kid. Myself wore a M1 during my service in West-Germany in 1987. Because my head is a little big at the back, I had the biggest size available. A few years later the Dutch army got the kevlar helmets.
I have great respect for the M1 helmet because it saved my face. On the 4th of July I wore my replica of the helmet I got as a gift from my grandfather. I was lighting a firecracker and it exploded to early. I was able to tilt my head away just enough for the helmet to take much of the fire that flew out. If I hadn't worn one I probably would have a scar on my forehead. True story.
This channel connects me with people I might have known in better times, and I want to thank you Mark for helping me to know their experiences and celebrate their lives!
A very close friend of mine, who was a veteran of the First World War, Arthur Pursell (1890-1986), told me the main danger in that war was the artillery, not machine guns. You had to be able to hear shells approaching to stay alive. He thought one big advantage of the Brodie helmet was you could hear much better in it. And it was much easier in a foxhole, to slide it over to cover your face. Said he’d tried on captured German helmets, and didn’t know how they could hear incoming shells in time. Their helmets so attenuated the sound to your ears.
Interesting! I just checked my last one & it is early ww2, I kept that one because it was the only one in the pile with the stainless trim. 20 yrs ago I bought 100 if these for $25 from Smith & Edwards surplus in Utah. There was more than enough of them rotting into the ground to fill a 40ft shipping container & my 100 barely made a dent in the stack.
We still had them in Grenada and Beruit .We were the last unit to pull out of Beruit we took many a bird bart in them .We didnt get Kevlars until the summer of 1984
It is one of those helmets that ended up being spread around the world. Even if the helmets other countries used weren't made in America the design certainly was inspired by the M1. The fact it remained in use over forty years after its introduction proved it was a serviceable design.
When i exited the USAF in 1993, They were STILL current issue to all troops except Security Police, Pararescue and Combat Controllers.....It fit righteously when you had a gas mask on, but seemed to roll and bounce alot otherwise.... When running, one hand on top to keep from falling off..........
I finally had to turn in my M-1 Steel Pot for a Fritz Helmet in 1989. In the 1970s and 1980s the vast majority of our CIF Issue was brand new straight out of the box by made in 1945.
That's the helmet that I wore starting in 1979. If you took the liner out of it, it could be used as a pot to cook in, as a basin to wash in, or as a bucket.
I was part of a color guard in the US Army several times and we were issued chrome M1 helmets. I was also part of a large contingent that served as riot troops at the 1973 Inauguration and we were issued face shields that attached to our M1 helmets. I was never in an airborne unit so I never recall anyone using the chin strap on their helmet. That's my experience but I'm not sure if that was typical or not.
We used later versions, in the Australian Army into the 80's. Rarely wore them, strung them in our packs with 2 ocky straps. Aside from that it was useful as a seat, or to lean your rifle on ti keep it out of the mud, or, if you scrubbed the paint off, a cooking pot for stews of ration packs. Which invariably resulted in being told off when caught.
We would spray paint our steel pots, usually once a year, before an Inspector General (IG) inspection. New paint would conceal rust along the seam. You could tell the units preparing for the IG by the sidewalks and company street areas with paint on the ground; between Ardennes & Gruber in the Division area, Ft Bragg.
I was in the Army from 1979 to 1992. I used the M1 from 1979 till 1985. I have to admit the Kevlar, or K-Pot as we used to call it, was far better hen it came to ballistic performance but no where near as versatile as the good old M1. You could cook food in it, ramen noodles and believe it not popcorn. You could wash with it, melt snow in it for drinking water and even dig a hole it in an emergency. I almost feel sorry for the soldiers that I’ll never how versatile the old steel pot was.
This is what we used in basic in 88. My rifle in basic was a practically silver receiver A1 with triangle handguard. Who knows how many times it had been rebuilt from parts and pieces until it found its way to me.
we were issued M1 helmets in the Canadian army as well from the 60's through to the early 90's where they were replaced by the Kevlar 'fritz' style modern ballistic helmet.
Was issued one when I enlisted in the Australian army 92.. The only time I ever carried/ wore it was at on the grenade ranges, otherwise it stayed at home
I had one of each. The first was either British or very old US. It was in my grandparents basement in San Gabriel, Calif. The second one, a US Navy M1 issued to me on my ship in 1971. I have too much stuff. Got rid of these when thinning out posessions. Now I'm sorry and wish I had them back.
I've had one of these on display in my man cave for years. Never gave it much thought after I got it. It was milsurp from Denmark. I bought a VietNam era cover for it, for display. The only other time I handled it was to recover it from my grandson, playing with it outside. After watching this vid I checked it out, and it's a WWII McCord. Three digits followed by what looks like an "A". Kinda hard to see because it's obviously been refinished. Thanks for the info.
They were used in the Australian Army until the mid to late 80s. We hated them and they were rarely worn. It was a bush or a slouch hat until the lighter Kevlars came in. The 'old and bolds hated them as well.
One of the advantages of the “steel pot” was that you could cook in it.I remember in ‘Nam we had was called a “potluck”, that was throwing all kinds of C rations together into the “pot” and stirring it.You can’t do that with a Kevlar helmet.
During my basic training in the 80s we had the crappy old British army helmets with the spider lining and whopping great spike in the middle. Very primitive and hurt like hell when your mate slapped down on top!
Sadly the chin straps were not often used as depicted in many of your photos. This resulted in many men getting wounded and killed, the blast from high explosive ordinance would blow the helmet off the guys head, leaving him un protected for the following shrapnel. This not wearing chip straps is still carried out today on construction sites etc. around the world, the wearer stumbles, the helmet falls off, the worker fall striking his head. Something the helmet was designed to prevent.
Great video!!! Wore this style of head cover while in US army from 1981-1985, when the Kevlar began replacing it. Loved the "steel pot" for it literally had 101+ uses - only limited to ones imagination. The Kevlar.....it did its job and served its purposes.
How confusing,into the Q store,er requisition an M1,well soldier,is that an M1 Garand ? an M1 carbine ? an M1 tank ? an M1 helmet ? or anything else ??
It's rather easy. More so that trying to remember all sorts of date designations for equipment, vehicles and weapons which can vary wildly. It's much easier to request M1 Rifle, M1 Carbine, M1 Sub-machine gun, M1 Helmet, M3 Sub-machine gun, M1A1 Carbine, etc. Anyone who isn't a complete dumbass would have a hard time being confused by the designation system when their job revolves around it.
As much as I love the stahlhelm, having used one as a reenactor, it has a few serious problems that the m1 doesn't. It impeded my directional hearing, it is difficult to look up or straightforward when prone and they are in a variety of different sizes so if you lost yours on the battlefield you would have a tough time finding a replacement that fit you. The m1 does not block the wearers hearing and retains freedom of movement also one size fits all. The m1 is begrudgingly better for combat.
While the stahlhelm was the best in terms of protection, it had serious drawbacks, on top of which it's heavy as hell. I've worn the M35 Stahlhelm for periods that lasted a few days and they strain the neck. They decrease your hearing from the sides and back, but also love to funnel loud sounds (gunfire, blasts, etc) right into your ears. Not very pleasant. The Stahlhelm wasn't a universal design like the M1 was. With the M1 the Infantry and paratrooper's used the same helmet and suspension, only adding an extra chinstrap for the paratroopers. It was also used by naval and Army Air Forces gunnery crews with slight modifications to accommodate ear phones for comms. The Stahlhelm had to have the flared portions lopped off and the suspension completely changed for the Fallschirmjäger to use. You wouldn't want to jump out of a plane with a Stahlhelm on. The M1 was also far more comfortable when using with field telephones and radios. The liner webbing wasn't prone to digging into your head like the Stahlhelm, even if the Stahlhelm is of the correct size. And the M1 is only one size. As someone who has worn both extensively, I'd take the M1. With the Stahlhelm, I wear a 60cm, I was blessed with a rather large cranial area, but makes fitting the Stahlhelm difficult as you heed the correct liner size and shell size. Not so with the M1, finding a replacement in the field is easier with an M1 than any variation of Stahlhelm
Looking back at this, Mark's videos have come a long way since
He found a great editor. It's similar to like the great war channel
It's strange how much the simple helmet carries the identity of the army using it.
As an old "Steel Pot" Marine, I appreciate the interesting information about this famously shaped combat helmet. This is what I wore during two tours as a grunt in Vietnam. Thanks.
Thank you for your service
God yes I remember my M1 Steel "Skid-Lid". An old Korean era Sergeant Major in my first permeant party unit (2nd Armored Div. Fort Hood Tx.) showed me how to remove the interior paint, prepare it and "season" the steel shell for cooking, and also how to maintain it and prevent rusting. Treat it like you would a good quality cast iron skillet and it will serve you well. It was the do everything tool (helmet, wash basin, cooking pot and entrenching tool, make shift club, or sitting stool), try that with a modern Kevlar helmet. I still have mine, when they were being removed from service I had our supply sergeant bill me for a field damage/lose and was given a receipt of purchase to own it as surplus.
I used to put a thick sometimes wet sponge in my M1 helmet. Served as a cushion and helped cool my head. Learned it from an old Vietnam GySgt.
As one who wore both the M1 and the kevlar the steel pot had many advantages. It made a great “sink” for assorted uses. The liners were useful too in hot climates
As a retired Army Officer, the four things I hated giving up through 32 years of active service, my M-14, my M-1 Helmet, my Colt .45, and my Jeep. Thank God I was long retired and missed the greatest travesty, taking the Black Beret away from the 75th Ranger Regiment. The Tan one The Ranger Association sent me has no meaning....
I only have one M1 helmet. But it was my helmet in jump school in 1977. Glad I have it. It still has my trainee number (T173) on masking tape on the front.
Dear Dr mark Felton, I have things to do , a job, a family, house chores . Yet here I sit day after day one video leads to another must watch and darkness falls nothing done but a history full of mark Felton productions . Thanks for making my days and ruining them all at the same time!
Damn i love this channel
Thanks. Support appreciated
I still have my father's helmet liner from WW2. My brother wore the M1 in Vietnam. He said it bounced when he ran, and he had to hold it with one hand.
Is it possible that he was issued an oversized one?
he must have had it adjusted improperly.
There was a lot of running in the Nam.
Lord Gaben m1s aren’t sized. It’s a one size fits all type of thing. The liners are adjustable though so you can make the band tighter if you need to.
@@blumpfreyfranks8863 one size fits all.
I was issued my first M1 helmet in October, 1960 and turned in my last in 1984. I did not have one in all of my assignments but I was always issued one when assigned to a combat unit. In the Berlin Brigade every soldier and every officer had two helmet liners, one to wear under their steel "pots" and the other, called a Spandau for parades, guard duty, and other formal occasions. The Spandau.was painted dark blue with applied decals. At training centers Cadre wore painted helmet liner to differentiate them from the trainees.
With a few minor modifications the M1 was also turned into a good paratrooper helmet. A different chinstrap at the very least. By my time we had an additional foam pad at the back which I doubt the US had in WW 2.
I started in the US Army back in 1986 issued with one. By 1988 the Army finally went to all Kevlar helmets. I retired in 2009 with the modified MICH helmet. I still have and M1, PASGT, and MICH in my collection.
Liar stolen valor
My father went in the Marines back in '81. He was Marine Force Recon, he started off with a modified M1 for airborne use and transitioned to the PASGT around the time of Grenada. He liked the PASGT for it's protection, but was always partial to the M1 for the way it wore.
The legend is born
We used an M1 variant in the Canadian Army until the CG 634 helmet was adopted in 1997. I still have my old parachutist's helmet with the reversible "Mitchell" pattern camouflage cover and jumper's helmet liner. The special jumper's liner featured a second chin strap and a foam rubber pad at the back of the head, just in case.
Wore the M1 in the Air Force ( security police) in the late 70s and through all my Army guard service in the 80s. Was not issued a Kevlar until we were getting ready to ship out to Saudi for the first Gulf.
I don't know what others experienced, but I guess the California ARNG was in no hurry to equip its units with the Kevlar helmets, even though they were in use by the regular forces several years before, until they absolutely had to.
the m1 type helmet was in use in the Norwegian army until the late 90s and early 2000s, together with other outdated equipment and weapons, such as the mp40 and Suomi m31 in use til 1995
Never before heard this theme music in one of your videos. Great history, just like what you always deliver.
I liked the M1 helmet.
It protected your head. You could bathe in it, you could cook in it, what more could you ask for??
Man in the 1970s and 1980s
I wore my M-1 Helmet . I cooked in it, shaved in it and even took a BATH in it. :)
Thanks Mark,
1974 US Army Boot Camp:
Today I wear a scare across the top of my nose from an M-1 Steel Pot creasing me one night. :)
We were at Ft Polk LA. Night ambush training. We walked into an ambush and was told to "GET DOWN" in the prone position. Well I did, and the rim of the steel pot 'bit me' right across my schnooz...LOL
If I recall correctly, ours didnt have a chin strap on it, so it just rattled around on top of your head. :)
.... Us old US Army Veterans sure like your videos and you preserving our History!
Thanks brother - Herb
A Staff Sgt. in the US Army
..........."Cavalry Scout"
Mr. Felton, Sir, thank you for this video. Collecting military helmets it's one of my hobbies, and so far I was able to gather a modest 30-and-something helmets, from various countries and armies, most of them original pieces issued during and after WW 2 (+ some replicas of WW1 helmets). I have two US M1s in my collection, one made in 1956 and another in 1979 (bought both of them via ebay). This being said, I hope you will consider the idea of making more videos about WW2 and Cold War helmets - some of them have fascinating stories! For example, the DDR (German Democratic Republic) helmet, designed by Nazis and rejected by Hitler due to propaganda reasons (!), adopted by Eastern Germany only because Hitler refusal :-) and used up to the collapse of Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall. Or the Romanian helmet of WW2, bought from Holland before (and used during) the war to Stalingrad and back, then replaced by the Soviet helmet in 50s, only to be re-designed and reintroduced by the Romanian Socialist (and nationalist) regime of Nicolae Ceausescu in 60s, and finally replaced in 2000s by the NATO standard, modern kevlar-made helmet.
Thanks again for your video(s). And best from Bucharest!
I grew up with a M1 WWII liner and a WWI stahlhelm bought from surplus stores. The M1 fit OK, the Stahlhelm was huge and heavy, like wearing a bunker.
In the Army 1967 we wore just the liners in training, much lighter. I wore the MI in the Infantry Vietnam. We had a camo cover for which the Army provided an elastic band at the base to keep it neat but the Marines did not (about the only way to tell the services apart from combat pictures). Also we never employed the chin strap but buckled it behind the helmet even though that meant the helmet could fall off when running and jumping around.
I remember during the Grenada campaign, there were US troops equipped with the M1 helmet and then other troops who were wearing the then new Kevlar one.
Cool vid. I used to have one of these exact helmets I received as B-day gift when I was about tenbut sold it at garage sale when I was teenager. I still haven't forgiven myself.
I still have my issued M1 helmet I got in 1977. Love that old steel pot.
Yous guys will come to know and love your helmet and helmet liner. They are multi function tools of perfection and protection......
My steel pot had a chrome liner which I didn't know about until I pulled them apart several days later when I was cleaning it. I immediately knew it was for honor guard or parade ground use. Sadly though since it came to me all as 1 piece, when I separated the 2 there was a heavy single trail of blood from the right mid rear up to almost the crown on the outside of the liner. I later found out it had been in storage since vietnam until I got it in 1984. Have no idea whose it was or what happened to them. Odd, I'm sure a parade liner was uncommon to have outside of a select group.
Trying to pry the 2 apart was almost impossible. It took 2 days of trying before I was finally successful.
McCord Radiator was located in Detroit and made many products for cars including mufflers and gaskets. They were perfectly suited for helmet production due to their expertise in stamping steel. Besides the helmets, their advertising signs, clocks and thermometers are highly prized by collectors.
My father has a M1 with some bullet holes in it. Found it in Nijmegen after the battle in 1944, when he was a kid. Myself wore a M1 during my service in West-Germany in 1987. Because my head is a little big at the back, I had the biggest size available. A few years later the Dutch army got the kevlar helmets.
That was definitely the most interesting programme so far, stuff i wouldn't have got without a lot of looking.
I have great respect for the M1 helmet because it saved my face. On the 4th of July I wore my replica of the helmet I got as a gift from my grandfather. I was lighting a firecracker and it exploded to early. I was able to tilt my head away just enough for the helmet to take much of the fire that flew out. If I hadn't worn one I probably would have a scar on my forehead. True story.
I will have to start buying your books, I like your videos too much and you seem to have good flow when you convey a thought. Thank you Doctor Felton!
This channel connects me with people I might have known in better times, and I want to thank you Mark for helping me to know their experiences and celebrate their lives!
I liked the M-1 because it could be used as a sink for washing and shaving.
Not being rude but what year were you born ?
I subscribed to your channel a few months ago, and it's funny seeing how much the quality videos have progressed! Keep up the good work!
Thought I was watching Red Letter Media when this started.
A very close friend of mine, who was a veteran of the First World War, Arthur Pursell (1890-1986), told me the main danger in that war was the artillery, not machine guns. You had to be able to hear shells approaching to stay alive. He thought one big advantage of the Brodie helmet was you could hear much better in it. And it was much easier in a foxhole, to slide it over to cover your face. Said he’d tried on captured German helmets, and didn’t know how they could hear incoming shells in time. Their helmets so attenuated the sound to your ears.
Interesting! I just checked my last one & it is early ww2, I kept that one because it was the only one in the pile with the stainless trim. 20 yrs ago I bought 100 if these for $25 from Smith & Edwards surplus in Utah. There was more than enough of them rotting into the ground to fill a 40ft shipping container & my 100 barely made a dent in the stack.
We still had them in Grenada and Beruit .We were the last unit to pull out of Beruit we took many a bird bart in them .We didnt get Kevlars until the summer of 1984
I love these videos my dad was a ww2 veteran and I have seen pictures of him in one of these helmets
It is one of those helmets that ended up being spread around the world. Even if the helmets other countries used weren't made in America the design certainly was inspired by the M1. The fact it remained in use over forty years after its introduction proved it was a serviceable design.
Love the vid! So informative and intriguing. Nice work.
In the Seabees we called them piss pots
Taiwan and Malaysia still uses M1 Steel helmet for recruit training and disaster relief purposes.
ive been enjoying these , well done Mark.
When i exited the USAF in 1993, They were STILL current issue to all troops except Security Police, Pararescue and Combat Controllers.....It fit righteously when you had a gas mask on, but seemed to roll and bounce alot otherwise.... When running, one hand on top to keep from falling off..........
I finally had to turn in my M-1 Steel Pot for a Fritz Helmet in 1989. In the 1970s and 1980s the vast majority of our CIF Issue was brand new straight out of the box by made in 1945.
That's the helmet that I wore starting in 1979. If you took the liner out of it, it could be used as a pot to cook in, as a basin to wash in, or as a bucket.
one of my favorite helmets for their general price range, even for wwii originals
Very interesting. Thank you again for the research.
I was part of a color guard in the US Army several times and we were issued chrome M1 helmets. I was also part of a large contingent that served as riot troops at the 1973 Inauguration and we were issued face shields that attached to our M1 helmets.
I was never in an airborne unit so I never recall anyone using the chin strap on their helmet. That's my experience but I'm not sure if that was typical or not.
What is our (American) obsession with "M1" everything? I know the "model" history and all that, but it's still confusing!
It is interesting to see the styli differences between this video and the current crop. All deserve, and receive from me, a thumbs up.
We used our M1 for a shaving bowl in Vietnam They were too hot for Asia
I wore the M1 in 1983 BCT at Ft. Knox, KY.
I served in the US Army 1984-1988 and we were issued these with our TA-50.
We used later versions, in the Australian Army into the 80's. Rarely wore them, strung them in our packs with 2 ocky straps. Aside from that it was useful as a seat, or to lean your rifle on ti keep it out of the mud, or, if you scrubbed the paint off, a cooking pot for stews of ration packs. Which invariably resulted in being told off when caught.
We would spray paint our steel pots, usually once a year, before an Inspector General (IG) inspection. New paint would conceal rust along the seam. You could tell the units preparing for the IG by the sidewalks and company street areas with paint on the ground; between Ardennes & Gruber in the Division area, Ft Bragg.
Had the steel pot in basic loved it. When i received the Kevlar it was much heavier. ..the gave us foam donuts which helped.
I was in the Army from 1979 to 1992. I used the M1 from 1979 till 1985. I have to admit the Kevlar, or K-Pot as we used to call it, was far better hen it came to ballistic performance but no where near as versatile as the good old M1. You could cook food in it, ramen noodles and believe it not popcorn. You could wash with it, melt snow in it for drinking water and even dig a hole it in an emergency. I almost feel sorry for the soldiers that I’ll never how versatile the old steel pot was.
This is what we used in basic in 88. My rifle in basic was a practically silver receiver A1 with triangle handguard. Who knows how many times it had been rebuilt from parts and pieces until it found its way to me.
Mark has evolved waay beyond this.
This is produced like a bad 1986 wedding video
we were issued M1 helmets in the Canadian army as well from the 60's through to the early 90's where they were replaced by the Kevlar 'fritz' style modern ballistic helmet.
The M-1 pot is, dare I say it....beautiful. As is the WWII stahlhelm.
Was issued one when I enlisted in the Australian army 92.. The only time I ever carried/ wore it was at on the grenade ranges, otherwise it stayed at home
I had one of each. The first was either British or very old US. It was in my grandparents basement in San Gabriel, Calif.
The second one, a US Navy M1 issued to me on my ship in 1971.
I have too much stuff. Got rid of these when thinning out posessions. Now I'm sorry and wish I had them back.
The silhouette of the M1 did change sometime after WWII slightly. Compare a Vietnam era one to a WWII one and you'll see what I mean.
Should point out last run was cut a bit higher in the back so the back of the helmet didn't hit pack or radio and the front dome was a bit shallower
I always preferred the M1 to the Kevlar.
I've had one of these on display in my man cave for years. Never gave it much thought after I got it. It was milsurp from Denmark. I bought a VietNam era cover for it, for display. The only other time I handled it was to recover it from my grandson, playing with it outside. After watching this vid I checked it out, and it's a WWII McCord. Three digits followed by what looks like an "A". Kinda hard to see because it's obviously been refinished. Thanks for the info.
Glad to be of service
I think you used every transition available in your Mac. Your videos today are so much better!
They were used in the Australian Army until the mid to late 80s. We hated them and they were rarely worn. It was a bush or a slouch hat until the lighter Kevlars came in. The 'old and bolds hated them as well.
I wore that helmet for two years and never really gave a shit who made it.
One of the advantages of the “steel pot” was that you could cook in it.I remember in ‘Nam we had was called a “potluck”, that was throwing all kinds of C rations together into the “pot” and stirring it.You can’t do that with a Kevlar helmet.
I was issued this type in 2003 for my Basic Training in New Zealand.
I still had one of those in 2002 when i was doing my time in the austrian army, you could use the steel part to shave or wash yourself
Love these intro's
excellent, i always wondered about that inner liner after i saw it in band of brothers
During my basic training in the 80s we had the crappy old British army helmets with the spider lining and whopping great spike in the middle. Very primitive and hurt like hell when your mate slapped down on top!
Sadly the chin straps were not often used as depicted in many of your photos. This resulted in many men getting wounded and killed, the blast from high explosive ordinance would blow the helmet off the guys head, leaving him un protected for the following shrapnel.
This not wearing chip straps is still carried out today on construction sites etc. around the world, the wearer stumbles, the helmet falls off, the worker fall striking his head. Something the helmet was designed to prevent.
Always interesting thanks Mark 🤠👍
What an Amazing Channel!!!
I was issued a steel pot in basic in 88, then Kevlar at my first unit. The Kevlar was probably the better helmet but I liked the steel pot.
The most beautiful helmet was the German ww2, also the French. The British different. Others very common
Wore the " steel pot" in BCT FLW '87. Got the kevlar in permanent station same year.
Great video!!! Wore this style of head cover while in US army from 1981-1985, when the Kevlar began replacing it. Loved the "steel pot" for it literally had 101+ uses - only limited to ones imagination. The Kevlar.....it did its job and served its purposes.
Thx for the information. I have an original us m1 helmet with original liner.
4:30 you can see the great Mark Felton in reflection of M1 due to lightning and the finish
Yep, wore it from 75 to 80 in the Marines.
We were issued them for deployment exercises in the 80's!
How confusing,into the Q store,er requisition an M1,well soldier,is that an M1 Garand ? an M1 carbine ? an M1 tank ? an M1 helmet ? or anything else ??
It's rather easy. More so that trying to remember all sorts of date designations for equipment, vehicles and weapons which can vary wildly.
It's much easier to request M1 Rifle, M1 Carbine, M1 Sub-machine gun, M1 Helmet, M3 Sub-machine gun, M1A1 Carbine, etc. Anyone who isn't a complete dumbass would have a hard time being confused by the designation system when their job revolves around it.
Still have mine, circa 1975
Thank you!
Great video. One suggestion. The picture you used for Korea was a Turkish Battalion which served there.
We use them for heating water to wash in they worked great. Lets see you do that with a new model. LOL
👍👍👍 on the choice of music.
A much needed upgrade
Stahlhelm is the best though
As much as I love the stahlhelm, having used one as a reenactor, it has a few serious problems that the m1 doesn't. It impeded my directional hearing, it is difficult to look up or straightforward when prone and they are in a variety of different sizes so if you lost yours on the battlefield you would have a tough time finding a replacement that fit you.
The m1 does not block the wearers hearing and retains freedom of movement also one size fits all. The m1 is begrudgingly better for combat.
While the stahlhelm was the best in terms of protection, it had serious drawbacks, on top of which it's heavy as hell. I've worn the M35 Stahlhelm for periods that lasted a few days and they strain the neck. They decrease your hearing from the sides and back, but also love to funnel loud sounds (gunfire, blasts, etc) right into your ears. Not very pleasant.
The Stahlhelm wasn't a universal design like the M1 was. With the M1 the Infantry and paratrooper's used the same helmet and suspension, only adding an extra chinstrap for the paratroopers. It was also used by naval and Army Air Forces gunnery crews with slight modifications to accommodate ear phones for comms.
The Stahlhelm had to have the flared portions lopped off and the suspension completely changed for the Fallschirmjäger to use. You wouldn't want to jump out of a plane with a Stahlhelm on.
The M1 was also far more comfortable when using with field telephones and radios. The liner webbing wasn't prone to digging into your head like the Stahlhelm, even if the Stahlhelm is of the correct size. And the M1 is only one size.
As someone who has worn both extensively, I'd take the M1. With the Stahlhelm, I wear a 60cm, I was blessed with a rather large cranial area, but makes fitting the Stahlhelm difficult as you heed the correct liner size and shell size. Not so with the M1, finding a replacement in the field is easier with an M1 than any variation of Stahlhelm