Hi All,
You may remember that I was working on getting several tall projectiles out of Japan. Well, in early September I received another batch of them, and they happened to be the 'restoration lot'. I started with the restoration work, by first removing as much rust as possible using a steel brush, and today I got to do this on a 12Pr projectile.
Even with the rust in place, it was clear it was marked (a.o.) "12Pr IV" and with a date of "16/8/1901" on the nose, as well as some other markings.
As the Japanese used the 12Pr calibre, and as they made heavy use of British manufactured ammo around that time, I was counting on this projectile to have been British manufactured, for export to Japan. However, when removing the rust, more markings appeared. One set of markings by all means seems to be the British broad arrow, with a date "10/1901" underneath it. Somewhere else on the projectile I also encountered a further seemingly broad arrow (it misses the rightmost leg though!), as well as some individual letters like a 'T' a 'C P' and an 'R'. The base has the number '468' (possibly 466) stamped into it.
The longer block of text on the side reads:
Q F
12 PR IV
C S
K
The projectile is 300mm tall and has a surprisingly big inner cavity (the measuring tape went in some 280mm), it seems to be a pointed base fuzed HE projectile. It is quite heavy, at 3380 grams. Sadly, the driving band is missing. It must have had a height of 27mm, and it started at 11mm from the base. The 'recessed inner circle' at the base is 54mm in diameter and is 7mm recessed. The screw thread has a diameter of 38mm and a height of 25mm.
Can anyone tell me some more about this projectile?
Do the (apparent) broad arrows indeed make it fully British accepted, and hence not an export product, or could it be this one was exported to Japan after all? Note: the projectile was found in Japan (I'm guessing at a scrap dealer's place).
I like the extensive markings on the projectile. Is it anything special, or is it a common one?
Any input will be well appreciated.
Cheers,
Olafo









You may remember that I was working on getting several tall projectiles out of Japan. Well, in early September I received another batch of them, and they happened to be the 'restoration lot'. I started with the restoration work, by first removing as much rust as possible using a steel brush, and today I got to do this on a 12Pr projectile.
Even with the rust in place, it was clear it was marked (a.o.) "12Pr IV" and with a date of "16/8/1901" on the nose, as well as some other markings.
As the Japanese used the 12Pr calibre, and as they made heavy use of British manufactured ammo around that time, I was counting on this projectile to have been British manufactured, for export to Japan. However, when removing the rust, more markings appeared. One set of markings by all means seems to be the British broad arrow, with a date "10/1901" underneath it. Somewhere else on the projectile I also encountered a further seemingly broad arrow (it misses the rightmost leg though!), as well as some individual letters like a 'T' a 'C P' and an 'R'. The base has the number '468' (possibly 466) stamped into it.
The longer block of text on the side reads:
Q F
12 PR IV
C S
K
The projectile is 300mm tall and has a surprisingly big inner cavity (the measuring tape went in some 280mm), it seems to be a pointed base fuzed HE projectile. It is quite heavy, at 3380 grams. Sadly, the driving band is missing. It must have had a height of 27mm, and it started at 11mm from the base. The 'recessed inner circle' at the base is 54mm in diameter and is 7mm recessed. The screw thread has a diameter of 38mm and a height of 25mm.
Can anyone tell me some more about this projectile?
Do the (apparent) broad arrows indeed make it fully British accepted, and hence not an export product, or could it be this one was exported to Japan after all? Note: the projectile was found in Japan (I'm guessing at a scrap dealer's place).
I like the extensive markings on the projectile. Is it anything special, or is it a common one?
Any input will be well appreciated.
Cheers,
Olafo








