Falcon
Well-Known Member
This morning at the car boot sale I picked up what I thought was a standard 105x326R case. it wasnt until I got home that I realised it had the remains of a purple stripe across the case head, which usually indicates a proof round in British service. It is a 1962 Dated example (see photo below):The two purple lines indicate remains of the purple stripe.
What do the "Three rings" marking next to "RLB" for Royal Laboratories and "RW297" mean? This case still has the black plastic collar in place at the neck. Was the projectile gripped by this? Does anyone have any photos or diagrams of this round?
There was no primer with this case, the primer hole was blocked up by an old brass drawer handle screwed into a small piece of wood inside the case, which I easily removed by splitting the old, dry wood with a chisel. This case had bits of soil inside, so I believe it was used as a plant pot.
EDIT: I forgot to include that traces of the ink stampings "L36A1" "SUPER" can still be clearly seen if the case head is viewed at the right angle. According to an online source, the "L36" is a smoke round, so is the plastic collar possibly exclusive to smoke rounds?

What do the "Three rings" marking next to "RLB" for Royal Laboratories and "RW297" mean? This case still has the black plastic collar in place at the neck. Was the projectile gripped by this? Does anyone have any photos or diagrams of this round?
There was no primer with this case, the primer hole was blocked up by an old brass drawer handle screwed into a small piece of wood inside the case, which I easily removed by splitting the old, dry wood with a chisel. This case had bits of soil inside, so I believe it was used as a plant pot.
EDIT: I forgot to include that traces of the ink stampings "L36A1" "SUPER" can still be clearly seen if the case head is viewed at the right angle. According to an online source, the "L36" is a smoke round, so is the plastic collar possibly exclusive to smoke rounds?
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