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Bought this at Chatham this morning. Is it a 30mm RARDEN practice projectile? It is marked ‘Inerte’ on the solid nose and marked ‘24 180 154’ on the body. I assume the paint isn’t original.
Edit: having browsed through Tony Williams’ superlative online ammunition gallery, the ‘30x170 (Rarden and early Oerlikon KCB with brass case)’ looks like a good match projectile-wise:
What’s better than matching up a case with a projectile? Yes, it’s matching up two cases with projectiles.
On the left, a case for the RARDEN projectile I got last month. On the right, WWI German 3.7cm HE shell to go with a trencharted naval 3.7cm case I bought some years ago. I don’t usually go for trench art, but I thought the addition of the centre of a Prussian army belt buckle was rather cool.
(And as the old WWI British army joke used to go, WE’VE GOT MITTENS TOO!)
I would say that it is a target practice for the Oerlikon KCB.
I have one with similar stamping on the bullet.
63 180 237 on the bullet and INERTE on the dummy fuze.
As far as I am aware, the projectiles are very likely the same (they would be interchangeable, anyway), but the cartridge is another matter, the Rarden ammo being brass-cased, the KCB steel-cased. I have been told that the KCB and Rarden rounds are not officially qualified to be fired in t'other's guns, but in practice probably can do so, although the brass-cased rounds might be given a rough time by the more violent handling of the KCB, which fires about six times faster.
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