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The Mark III helmet was designed to provide better protection for the side of the head than its predecessor. It was a deeper helmet with a smaller brim and provided 38% more protection than the Mark II, particularly at the sides (total area of head protection was increased by 12%, horizontal protection was increased by 15% and from items falling from overhead by 11%).
Two British soldiers in battledress with 1937 webbing wearing "Steel Helmet MKll" helmets. MKl*, and MKll “steel or bowl style helmet” [1] [2] - both the MKl* and Mkll helmet were introduced in 1938; Mk III "Turtle" helmet [3] - introduced in 1944; Helmet Steel Airborne Troop - for airborne forces
Helmet, Steel, Mark II: having purchased British helmets in the First World War and at the outbreak of the Second, Canadian helmet production commenced in 1940. The helmets were identical to the British original, except that the rubber "bumper" pads in the lining were only fitted to horizontal helmet band and not to the vertical bands.
Mk. 6 helmet: United Kingdom: British Armed Forces. [44] being replaced by the Mk. 7 helmet: Mk. 7 helmet: United Kingdom: British Armed Forces: MUKUT: India: Indian Armed Forces: Advanced Combat Helmet(ACH) type Kevlar helmet made by MKU. MICH TC-2000: United States: special operations – United States Army
.303 British Mk.VII: Mk.III; Mk.III* Lee–Enfield No.4 United Kingdom: 1943 Bolt-action .303 British Mk.VII Mk.I; Mk.6* Primary service rifle. Pattern 1914 Enfield United Kingdom: 1914 Bolt-action.303 British Mk.VII For training and use by snipers. [2] M1917 Enfield United States: 1917 Bolt-action.30-06 Springfield: Limited domestic use. Ross ...
Mk III helmet; Mk IV helmet; R. RAC helmet; Z. Zuckerman helmet This page was last edited on 1 April 2018, at 20:11 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Mk IV helmet is a combat helmet that was used by the British Army in the 1950s to 1980s. [ 1 ] It replaced the Mk III helmet and became the British Army's last metal helmet when it was replaced by the composite material Mk 6 helmet in 1985.
Mark III, a variant of the British Mark I tank; Mark III, an alternate name for the Fat Man atomic bomb used on Nagasaki, in use until 1949; Supermarine Spitfire Mk III; a single 1940 British fighter aircraft pre-production prototype; Mk III Turtle helmet (1944); British Army helmet that first saw action in the Normandy Landings