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I am looking for a picture of a good condition German 1st WW 7,7 cm Kartätsche as seen on the attached picture. Basically I want to know if the steel sheet metal was tinplate?
Collection commentée de livres de témoins ou d’histoire, de guides, de romans, citations, photographies et militaria de la guerre 14-18. Site écrit par un amateur belge, passionné de l’histoire de la guerre 1914-1918
Canister shots (or 'Grape shots'), were designed for close range defence. It was generally a cylindrical zinc or brass box with very thin walls, closed at its base and top by cheap means, and filled with lead bullets somewhat heavier than the ones of the shrapnel shells.
This ammunition was dismantled inside the gun tube by the discharge and propulsed its bullets load at point blank. In WW1, most of the guns needing this kind of ammo could use a conventional shrapnel shell to obtain a comparable effect by setting the fuze at range 'zero'
The canister shots were therefore rarely used during WW1, except for some specific applications, such as close-range fortresses defence guns or infantry guns.
Hello, and thank you for taking the time to answer my question. I purchased an inert ww1 artillery shell at a local antique market. After spending an entire day searching for examples like it online, I have come up empty handed. The closest guess that I can come up with is that it is grapeshot...
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