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It looks like the inside forging of the insert welded into a bomb casing for the lug to screw into, or the inside forging where the conduits to the fuze wells attach. It looks most like the conduit attachment well, with the conduits broken off.
OK, pzgr40/42 is mostly right, so I will call him the winner. It is the top plate to hold the shrapnel balls in allignment for an American 3.2 inch bag loaded High Explosive Shrapnel projectile. For some reason both people that were close over guessed the projo diameter.
In the disassembled projo photo, all of the red ogive part is the explosive filled (Black Powder) burster chamber. Percussion-powder train time fuze detonates the nose opening everything up. The balls are lead about 1/2 inch in diameter, stacked in layers with metal dividers keeping everything on it's own leverl, and no ball touches another ball.
So, photo of what the balls look like in the top layer (what the piece rests on). The other smaller piece is a central layer divider and is actually two 1/2 pieces.
The reason for my overestimating the calibre I guess is that, usually, the shrapnell balls/shot, in the "smaller" calibre shells, are contained in some kind of "matter" filling the space between the balls/shot, reducing/taking away the need for a spacer/aligner. Thus I figured on a larger calibre...............but I'm glad to have been wrong......learned something today
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