Posts: 5,981 Location: Birmingham, Alabama
Fri 18 Mar, 2011 10:09 am
The short answer is that this late medieval (apparently) German innnovation is meant to keep the visor down, so the lower right edge is the best position for it. I've never seen a spring pin of this era meant to hold up the visor. That answer doesn't solve your problem, though, so read on.
I have the very same helmet, with the same problem. The root of the problem is that the arms of the visor are too high and too far forward on the bowl. That restricts the articulation of the visor so that it stops short of the place where it wouldn't be fighting gravity quite as hard. That's actually o.k., historically, because when you see open visors in artwork they often are not pushed all the way up on the bowl, but are just high enough to clear the vision.
The weight of the visor is a contributing problem. This helmet is about 1-2 lbs overweight because it's 14 ga. throughout and VERY large. It is so large and deep, in fact, that I think it doesn't make a very convincing Italian export sallet of ca. 1460, which is what it aspires to be, stylistically. I'm rebuilding mine as a German or Austrian sallet of ca. 1480. Those tended to be larger/deeper and they also often had the spring pin, which I'll add in the usual place. Many German visors of this period did not have the multiple peaks typical of Italian export sallets of a couple of decades earlier. The GDFB visor has those peaks and also covers the forward strap rivets, which isn't right. Between those two features I've been able to cut quite a bit of steel off the GDFB's visor, which will help the visor stay up.
I'm not into the details yet, but I'll be trying to solve the remaining visor problem by using decorative bolts instead of the plain and too-small rivets for the visor pivots. That should allow me to adjust the tension of the visor so that it will stay up. If you're technically up for making and installing a spring pin you'd breeze through that modification. The holes are there--you'd just have to enlarge them slightly and cut/file/grind an appropriate design on the head of an off-the-shelf bolt. I'm not sure what kind of nut I'll use. Square would the most historical choice but it sure would be nice to have a good hex nut in there to tighten with a ratcheted socket wrench. This bowl is big enough that there should be plenty of clearance between it and your head, especially if you install a proper liner.
This is largely academic for me because I may never wear the thing in public. I enjoy the work, though, and the overall shaping of this sallet is surprisingly good for the price. With this kind of upgrade--including a proper liner--it should be pretty impressive.
Be sure to show us your results!
I'm just about to take up my GDFB project after a long hiatus. You can see a bit of what I've done so far. Since this photo I've also marked the rivet line. There's still a good bit of work to do on the visor.
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