


Hi John, I suspect that this grenade of mine along with its plug can be confirmed as made by Mills Munitions Ltd in May of 1915.Not many will be able to say that. Happy Christmas.
QUOTE=Millsman;315869]It's a great question.
The problem is that documentation for such preferences may not exist. The Army just wanted grenades in 1915 and the casting type was not as important as the numbers delivered. The other issue is that over 105 years so many base plugs have been swapped around so hand on heart can any collector
really guarantee the base plug fitted in 2020 is the same one as in 1915. It got easier in 1917 with the introduction of the No 23 Mk III. In my experience the number of No 5 grenades with a known original base plug is few, and they would have had to have been with one family from 1915 (and known to three generations).
Although Mills started with the transverse casting (Centre cast) it was apparent to some other makers immediately knew that you could make the longitudinal (Side cast) faster. There was no machining of the horizontal grooves. I suspect that some makers such as Westinghouse Brake, CAV, T Adshead may have gone for the side cast immediately, I say that as I've not seen a centre cast from these makers with a 'original base plug'.
The two types of casting persisted in the manufacturers drawings for a while but as I say in the book the CIW said the alternate wasn't needed in 1915, but did he mean the centre cast or the side cast? There may be something hidden in the National Archives.[/QUOTE]