VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK) VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK) VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK) VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK) VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK)

VERY RARE WW1 BRITISH 1915 SMOKE HOOD (GAS MASK)

This is a very rare WW1 British 1915 Smoke hood (Helmet) (Gas Mask), this is in overall very good condition for its age but the lenses are delicate and there are a couple of very very small holes to the back, still has its 2 original straps and still looks to have its filter padding in the mouth piece.

Introduced into British Army service in May 1915, the 'Hypo' or 'Smoke' helmet was intended to replace the stop-gap 'veil' respirators which had been rushed into production after the first German chlorine gas attack at Ypres in April. It was soaked in a solution of sodium hyposulphite, (from which the name 'Hypo' was adopted) bicarbonate of soda, and glycerine, which served to keep the chemicals moist. Initially fitted with a window made of Mica, which was extremely brittle and prone to damage, later examples had windows made of celluloid, or cellulose acetate.

By 6 June 1915, all British soldiers on the Western Front had been issued with a 'Hypo' helmet, but they did not prove popular in service. The troops disliked the complicated procedure for fitting (it was designed to be tucked inside the shirt and held in place by the tunic) and found it very hot and stuffy to wear. There was no valve for the intake or expiration of air, so that exhaled carbon dioxide tended to accumulate in the many folds and hollows of the fabric. It was also extremely difficult to aim a weapon while wearing it.

It nevertheless represented a major improvement on the primitive 'black veil' respirator, and the 'P', 'PH' and 'PHG' helmets which succeeded the 'Hypo' later in 1915 and 1916 all followed the same basic design. Australian and New Zealand troops serving in the Anzac area were issued with 'Hypo' helmets in late 1915, in anticipation of a Turkish use of gas which did not eventuate.

Code: 10201

1250.00 GBP