British WW2, Top Secret, Special Operations Executive, Special Air Service & Special Boat Service, Airborne Paras & Commando Issue. Top Secret  Infra-red Night Vision Monocular Scope. Circa.1944

British WW2, Top Secret, Special Operations Executive, Special Air Service & Special Boat Service, Airborne Paras & Commando Issue. Top Secret Infra-red Night Vision Monocular Scope. Circa.1944

Very top secret at the time. It was made to look like a water canteen and was so secret even the US was not told about it. It is in fact the first night vision glasses issued to special force British units like the SAS/SBS.

Rare and Top Secret World War Two night vision infra-red monocular scope contained in its original brown leather carrying case and marked on both piece and carrying case with Identification marks.

The Germans also had their version called the Vampir. ZG 1229;
The ZG 1229 Vampir weighed 2.26 kilograms (5.0 lb) and was fitted with lugs on the StG 44 at C.G. Haenel in Suhl, the weapons production facility. As well as the sight and infrared spotlight, there was a wooden-cased battery for the light weighing 13.59 kilograms (30.0 lb), and a second battery fitted inside a gas mask container to power the image converter. This was all strapped to a Tragegestell 39 (pack frame 1939).The searchlight consisted of a conventional tungsten light source shining through a filter permitting only infrared light. The sensor operated in the near-infrared (light) spectrum rather than in the thermal infrared (heat) spectrum and was, therefore, not sensitive to body heat.

The image given was described as being of great brilliance and good contrast. Standing men could be discerned up to 73 metres (80 yd), especially when moving. However, reports indicate that ZG 1229 units were extremely delicate and considered too cumbersome for attack situations

Brief History of the British version:-

Manufactured in 1943, the British designed monocular Infra red night vision equipment was the first of it’s kind and took it’s basic design from pre-war Farnsworth television equipment. Having the vague appearance of a water bottle in a leather case, this device was used, prior to and on D-Day in Normandy by the assault pilotage (COPPs and the SBS teams) to guide in the invasion task forces onto the beaches.
The unit itself comprised of a hermetically sealed receiver unit containing a triple pyle 3,000 volt battery, (long since dead) and the infra-red optics.

The screen is magnified by a lens-eyepiece which is adjustable for focus by turning. This device was used by the commando, airborne and ranger units in many famous battles over the period of WWII and was classified as Top Secret.

Code: 26274

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