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BOCN Guess what it is

Where's the Haines manual of the V1 when you need it?

Is it one of the pair of detonators that initiated the diving mechanism?


Tom.
 
Thanks Buster.

So what is the item in the photo? Just the generic device is all I'm looking for, not any official designation/model/modification number etc.
 

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Snufkin I got this item some time ago and was told that it was an electrically initiated cartridge which was fired to lock the elevators of the V1 missile in the down position. I was not sure of this until I saw the information in the web site www.zenza.se/vw/ . This includes a description of how the missle works and the diagram already posted. I do not know the correct designaion for the component, just thought it was unusual.
 
Snufkin I got this item some time ago and was told that it was an electrically initiated cartridge which was fired to lock the elevators of the V1 missile in the down position. I was not sure of this until I saw the information in the web site www.zenza.se/vw/ . This includes a description of how the missle works and the diagram already posted. I do not know the correct designaion for the component, just thought it was unusual.


Thanks again Buster. I found the system description and a photo from RAe Farnborough in a book aptly called "The Flying Bomb". With acknowledgements to the author Richard Young: "On completion of the pre-set mileage... ...the detonator circuit was completed. The electrical impulse fired two detonators in the tail assembly of the bomb, blowing out a flat steel plate which released a tensioned spring allowing a lever to snap backward about the pivot point". This caused a sequence of events: (a) put the elevator into neutral position; (b) centred the rudder; (c) released two hinged spoilers from under the tailplane to put the bomb into its dive...
 
Side and top view of unknown object, showing the precision engineering...

Overall height 26mm.
 

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Tom,Suppose if you wanted a device to retain a Mills grenade cocked striker using trip wire this object could do it. Would probably mean shortening the striker spring slightly and fitting the cylindrical bit into the striker hole between the shoulders. Just an idea.
 
Tom,Suppose if you wanted a device to retain a Mills grenade cocked striker using trip wire this object could do it. Would probably mean shortening the striker spring slightly and fitting the cylindrical bit into the striker hole between the shoulders. Just an idea.

Norman, I have indeed given some thought about how such a small and crude but effective device might have been used 30 odd years earlier, combined with other devices. However, it's not grenade related.
 
Could it be a pressure released striker booby-trap device for an AP mine?

Well identified! It's a ~4kg pressure switch from out of an Eastern Bloc or Chinese A/P mine.

(The photos are holiday snaps from Cambodia some years ago, taken at the landmine museum in Siem Reap.)


Over to you, V40...





Tom.
 

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