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Small Bomb Container

Chris

Well-Known Member
Ordnance approved
Found the remains of three SBC (see pictures)
Has anybody good drawings of this item.
Woul like to make a complete one out of the remains.

:santaclaus:
Chris
 
Smb 2

Oeps here are the pictures

Chris
 

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Its difficult to see from the photos which type of Small bomb container you have. Its not my particular area, but I hope the following photos may be of some help?

regards Kev

HPIM6507.jpgHPIM6508.jpgHPIM6509.jpg
 
Sbc

Hi Chris,

I recognized the pictures! Here are youre regards from the photographer!
See you next week somewhere down the coastline of Holland!

Grtz Viking
 
Sbc

Thank you butterfly for the pictures.
I'm sure the will be of any help.

Regards,


Chris
 
Cris,

Here some more pictures.

Greetings - Antoon
 

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  • 1000 lb. Small Bomb Containers (www.ww2guide.com).jpg
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Hi - I'm doing some research on ordnance carried by the Australian CAC Wirraway (cousin to the Harvard and Texan)...

Does anyone know if the SBC was ever carried externally (under the wings)... I'm trying to solve a puzzle of how a Wirraway could carry twenty 40lb bombs, with only 18 bomb slips. Apparently some Wirraways in Malaya serving with 21/453 Squadron RAAF carried this number of bombs...

I would welcome any suggestions which might solve this mystery.

Regards,
Derek
 
Hi - I'm doing some research on ordnance carried by the Australian CAC Wirraway (cousin to the Harvard and Texan)...

Does anyone know if the SBC was ever carried externally (under the wings)... I'm trying to solve a puzzle of how a Wirraway could carry twenty 40lb bombs, with only 18 bomb slips. Apparently some Wirraways in Malaya serving with 21/453 Squadron RAAF carried this number of bombs...

I would welcome any suggestions which might solve this mystery.

Regards,
Derek


Derek the 250 lb bomb container could take 6 of the 40lb GP bombs, I'm not sure if this helps or not as four units would mean 24 bombs not 20 as you say a Wirraway could carry. Also I dont know if these could be used externally, however what it perhaps shows is that it would be possible to carry twenty of these 40lb bombs with eighteen bomb slips. Maybe someone with more knowledge on these can help you more....good luck

regards Kev
 
Hi Derek...

another possibility is the Light Series Carrier, these held four bombs up to 40lb in weight including the 40lb GP you refer to.

It also could be used externally (I believe these were used on the wheel stubs of the Lysander aircraft). It also would mean that five units would be equal to 20 bombs. I am not familiar with the Wirraway, but positions could be under wing or under fuselage.

regards Kev
 
The Hudson 160lb SBC (2 cells of 4x20lbs bombs) seems to have been used on external racks on a number of planes - especially with teh RAAF - there is even reports of Australian Mustangs being such equipped - but till now I have not seen photographic confirmation of such arrangements.
 
Here a picture of the 160 lb. SBC. It was normally loaded with 40 x 4 lb. Incendiary Bombs (2 canisters, each with 20 x 4 lb.). On this picture there is a Life Raft placed in the SBC.

See also:
http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205210211

The normal 250 lb. SBC could be loaded with a variety of ordnance:
12 x 20 lb. Fragmentation Bomb
6 x 40 lb. General Purpose Bomb
24 x 9 lb. Anti Tank Bomb
60 x 4 lb. Incendiary Bomb (3 canisters each with 20 x 4 lb.)
? x 25 lb. Incendiary Bomb
8 x 30 lb. Incendiary Bomb
3 x 45 lb. Incendiary Bomb
42 x 4 lb. Smoke Bomb (3 canisters each with 14 x 4 lb.)
3 x 100 lb. Smoke Bomb
2 x 120 lb. Smoke Bomb

There should be also a SBC with 90 x 4 lb. Incendiary Bombs (3 canisters, each with 30 x 4 lb.)

On: chttp://www.iwm.org.u...bject/205075491 you can
see the larger SBC (1000 lb. ???) as used in Lancaster’s together with a smaller SBC. Is it
correct that the larger SBC holds
150 x 4 lb. or 12 x 30 lb. Incendiary Bombs? And does anyone knows when the large SBC was used the first time?


SBC small.jpg
 
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I am looking for Air Publication 1664 Bomb Carriers, Vol I Ch 3. The 250lb Container for Small Bombs

Greetings Antoon
 
Thanks for the info.

Looking for information about the 250 lb. SBC in Blenheim bombers.
Normally was a SBC loaded with six 40 lb. General Purpose bombs because of the maximum weight, but if correct could a modified SBC be loaded with eight GP bombs.

Greetings – Antoon
 
Hello Antoon,

the S.B.C. 250-lb. Mk. IA (May 1943) was early loaded with 60 and later with 90 4-lb. incendiaries. The other clusters which used by the R.A.F. were the so called Cluster Projectiles C.P. with C.P. 500-lb. No. 14 Mk. I (106 4-lb. inc.) end of 1943, C.P. 750-lb. No. 15 Mk. I (158) summer 1944 and the C.P. 1000-lb. No. 16 Mk. I (236) not before autumn 1944. Further exists to the end of the war the so called Cluster Nose Ejection C.N.E. 500-lb. Mk. I (110), 800-lb. Mk. I (170) and 950-lb. Mk. I (219). The R.A.F. used also the american C.P. AN-M17 (110) from summer 1944.

Hope this helps.
Rgds,
Mossie
 
Thks for the info.

Looking for information about the 250 lb. SBC in Blenheim bombers.
Normally was a SBC loaded with six 40 lb. General Purpose bombs because of the maximum weight, but if correct could a modified SBC be loaded with eight GP bombs.

Greetings – Antoon

Are you still looking Antoon???
Cheers,
Adrian
 
Lancaster Hi! If you happen to have new documentation on the various SBC versions, I'd appreciate very much if you can upload it - this is a matter upon which information is really scarce.
 
By screening the ORBs of the Lancaster squadrons, it appears that these larger SBC had a capacity of 150 x 4lb Incendiaries - although there is a schema in the Lancaster manual showing a SBC with 4 internal sections (something that does not fit with the total number of 150 incendiaries ) the following photograph shows the correct view of the interior of this larger SBC being filled with incendiaries - 3 sections of 50 incendiaries:
SBC - British 4lb incendiaries (1).jpg

The development of these larger SBC began in July 1943 and demanded the associate developments of dedicated "liners' (tin-plate boxes or “cans”, with a tear-off lid) for pre-packing 50x4lb.
SBC Modification 1 content.pngSBC Modification 2 content.png
This also appears in the memoirs of Sir Arthur Haris "Despatches on war operations 1942-45":
"At the beginning of 1942, Mark I type SBC were in use, and these carried either 8x39lb bombs or three "packs" of 30x4lb. In 1943 the Command developed a deeper SBC holding 12x30lb or 150x4lb bombs [in three "packs of 50x4lb]" .... "In 1943 the Bomber Command developed a deeper SBC, holding 12 x 30lb or 150 x 4lb bombs. The introduction of this equipment necessitated individual transfer of the bombs from the "30-packs" into the new "50-packs' liners in the SBC, a laborious operation, but justified by the greatly increased load....request was also made for the bombs to be packed in "50-pack" liners, instead of "30-pack" but production considerations rued this out."

This extract from the RAAF Standard Notes for Armourers 1943 describes the loading of 4lb incendiaries in a SBC:
SBC Screenshot 2021-07-09 120637.jpg
However this same manual describes only the SBC MkI (60x4lb in 3 compartments of 20x4lb) and MkIA (90x4lb in 3 compartments of 30x4lb) as it was published before the date of implementation of the above mention decision.
 
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