Hello everyone,
I recently acquired my first large calibre tank shell and would be grateful if anyone could confirm the following (or otherwise) that I know so far about it:
A British 105mm Tank Smoke shell. The projectile is dated January 1981 (pre Falklands War) and was manufactured by RLB - Royal Ordnance Factory, Birkley. The shell case is dated 1995 and was also made by RLB. The 105mm shell was fired from the British Centurion Tank fitted with the L7 cannon. They were deployed and saw service during the Falklands and Gulf wars to name a few.
I'd be grateful for any info about what the correct colours this shell would have been painted before firing and a photo would be even better! Could anyone hazard a guess as to how this shell survived in such an undamaged condition after being fired? Thanks.




I recently acquired my first large calibre tank shell and would be grateful if anyone could confirm the following (or otherwise) that I know so far about it:
A British 105mm Tank Smoke shell. The projectile is dated January 1981 (pre Falklands War) and was manufactured by RLB - Royal Ordnance Factory, Birkley. The shell case is dated 1995 and was also made by RLB. The 105mm shell was fired from the British Centurion Tank fitted with the L7 cannon. They were deployed and saw service during the Falklands and Gulf wars to name a few.
I'd be grateful for any info about what the correct colours this shell would have been painted before firing and a photo would be even better! Could anyone hazard a guess as to how this shell survived in such an undamaged condition after being fired? Thanks.





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