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120mm howitzer casing question

wingsofwrath

Well-Known Member
EDIT: I just realised I should have posted this in the "cartridge" section, but I don't seem to find a way to either move or delete this thread myself, so I guess it must live here until a mod either moves or deletes it.

So I have two puzzlers on my hand, both having to do with Romanian 120mm metallic cartridge howitzers, so I thought of combining them into a single thread rather than posting two of them.

The first one is the Gruson 120mm L/13 Howitzer Md.1888, originally a fortifications piece, and adapted in 1916 for field use.

img_230111376.jpg
Canon_de_120_mm_en_position_-_Médiathèque_de_l'architecture_et_du_patrimoine_-_AP62T103674.jpg

This one uses a necked down metallic cartridge with double rim of unknown dimensions. We have pictures from the Bucharest Military Museum of the ammunition this piece used and, knowing the dimensions of the shell, I was able to estimate them from the photos to around these:

img_230111372.jpgimg_230111371.jpg

The second piece that concerns us it the Krupp 120mm L/11.6 Howitzer Md.1901.

5145005376_c8c1cc45ab_o.jpg

Again, we have images of the metallic cartridges and from that we can estimate the dimensions and they seem to fit with the Krupp 128x84mmR140 which I know has been used by other countries, including the Netherlands and the Ottoman Empire.

img_230111373.jpg

img_230111370.jpg

Now, my question is - do any of you have any information, especially drawings, about any of these cartridge casings? Thank you!
 
Here 2 different Krupp drawings for the Dutch 128x84R140. The difference is only the primer thread (20 vs 18 TPI).
 

Attachments

  • 128x84R140 - 268 - 12 cm Krupp L12 howitser - primer 20 TPI.JPG
    128x84R140 - 268 - 12 cm Krupp L12 howitser - primer 20 TPI.JPG
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  • 128x84R140 - 327 - 12 cm Krupp L10 howitzer - primer 18 TPI.jpg
    128x84R140 - 327 - 12 cm Krupp L10 howitzer - primer 18 TPI.jpg
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Yes, thank you very much!

That's exactly what I needed and that drawing fits very well with the one from the manual that I have - unfortunately I only have photographs because the last time I had this in my hand I was already copying a whole lot so I decided to leave it for another time, but right now it's inaccessible, because the Bucharest Army Museum library is being audited so it's closed to the public.

So we can call one problem solved.
Now let's hope someone else has something about the Gruson howitzer, although I'm a bit pessimistic, because I don't think anybody else adopted it besides us...

img_230111390.jpg
 
Isn't there a digital archive somewhere with "Revista Artillerei"? When I google I do find some on Arcanum Digitheca (requiring an account).
 
Thanks for the answers!

@AKON_ the tables are very useful because we don't currently have the gun itself available either - we know where three of them are located at two WW1 monuments, but they're in the middle of nowhere and there used to be a gun at the Military Museum in Bucharest, but it was last seen on display in the 50s and the museum moved locations twice since then... Most likely is in the museum's storage yard at Targoviste, but there be dragons, because that's part of an active military base and access is restricted even for museum staff, let alone random artillery enthusiasts like myself...

WhatsApp Image 2024-06-14 at 11.39.28.jpeg

@fert yes, that's it, 100%.
Very glad to have a contemporary picture of one and especially a headstamp. One of the manuals (unfortunately one which doesn't have drawings, just text) mentions that for most of WW1 the main ammunition used by these guns was actually the same 120mm French "D" shell as used by the 120mm DeBange, because shell and casing are loaded separately, and this also confirms French productions of cartridge casings.

Finally, I think I cracked it, because, when falling asleep last night it came to me in a flash that the only other country that went absolutely ham for Gruson fortress guns besides Romania was Switzerland and I remembered this wonderful document scanned by @sgdbdr showing all manner of interesting Swiss ordnance, so I had a look through it...
And there it was, on page 34, the very casing I was looking for! (ok, so a blank training one, but nonetheless)

Sw2__Page_34.jpg

It fits almost perfectly to the little mock-up I had made in CAD, and, using page 21 from the same document as an extra reference -the Swiss had two 12cm howitzers - one was L/13 like ours, the other was L/25 and had a 124mm long cartridge, but with the same rim diameter, at 140.2mm - I was able to correctly scale the drawing, and it came in with a lenght of 114.5mm.

img_230111399.jpg

img_230111395.jpg

And there we have it folks, all present and correct.
In the next months I intend to delve deeper into these guns including my reconstructions of the projectiles, etc, so, as they say in Media, "watch this space".
 
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Isn't there a digital archive somewhere with "Revista Artillerei"? When I google I do find some on Arcanum Digitheca (requiring an account).
Nope, unfortunately there isn't, you have to go there in person. And since the library is closed right now for an audit (and has been for over a year), you can't even do that. besides, the numbers of this publication available on Arcanum are from 1927 onwards. The really interesting ones are, in my opinion, those before WW1.

I keep wishing the Bucharest Military Museum finally steps in the 21st century, but, so far, there's been a lot of institutional inertia, not helped by the fact the Museum is classed as an active army unit and the director is a military officer that changes every few years...

EDIT: also, thanks for the mods for moving this to the correct forum. I owe you one!
 
When I was browsing through sources for the 12 cm Gruson, I found something else I wasn't looking for: the 12 cm howitzer from the Belgian company John Cockerill S.A. in Seraing: here is the text about it.....
12cm Belg_MG_FULL.jpg
Akon
 
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