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    Thomas W

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    Posts posted by Thomas W

    1. Really interesting photo! I would like to know the story, too.

      The board with the German inscription "Die Schwarze Hand GmbH"?

      GmbH = Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung = Ltd.

      A kind of fun photo?

      I don't know. The Serbian Black Hand (which also used a Totenkopf symbol) started the war by killing Archduke Francis Ferdinand. Maybe this is a sarcastic German joke photo commenting about the war? I can't read the name of the park on the back of the card, but it looks Slavic.

    2. Where are we with the photo in post #440? Are we still thinking that the guy is a Bavarian soldier, but wearing the simplified tunic, not the Bavarian tunic?

      He's wearing the simplified Bavarian M.1907 tunic, which was issued in 1915. It was worn only by Bavarians. The giveaway is the cuff. The lower cockade on his cap is Bavarian, too.

      It may be a pioneer thing. Here's a man wearing a simplified Bavarian M.1907 tunic (note the cuff and the rampant lion on the buttons) with black pioneer shoulder straps, a Prussian belt, and a cap with the Prussian cockade. Is he a Prussian or a Bavarian? He's got an Edelweiss on his cap, so...

    3. Here's my drawing of the skull cap badge worn by flamethrower sappers of k.u.k. Sappeur-Bataillon Nr. 61. It was about one inch square and made of white metal, with a red enameled oval beneath the numbers. The Austrian military had no tradition of using skulls in its motifs. It was influenced by the flamethrower platoon of German Sturmbataillon Rohr, who wore the death's head sleeve badge.

    4. Thomas!

      I thought, that you could be interested to see this photo....

      That's a French Schilt No. 2 flamethrower. The poor men who used it had to carry it into battle using that wooden frame. The lance had no trigger or valve, so the way it was used was that the men carrying it had put it down on the ground. One man would throw incendiary grenades at the target, and then the second man would open the valve on the oil tank so that the lance operator could spray the oil at the flaming grenades. A second ignition method was to put small fuses on the end of the lance, but these only lasted for five seconds.

      This was a terrible weapon. In 1916 the French wisely changed the designation from "portable" to static, thus sparing the lives of the men who were assigned to use it.

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