What's new
British Ordnance Collectors Network

Join over 14,000 collectors of inert military ordnance. Get expert identification help for shells, fuzes, grenades, and more — plus access our classifieds marketplace and decades of archived knowledge. Free to register, takes seconds.

Recoved Fuze From D Day Practice Area

Weasel

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
Hi, This fuze was given to me years ago by a local farmer who had found it while out ploughing in a area used extensively by the US on the build up to D Day. I had always assumed it to be of US origin, Having looked at the List of British Fuzes on this site it would seem to be a British naval fuze. Has anyone got any idea which type of shell this would have been used on.?
Weasel.
fuze_0032.jpg
 
Used with 6in BL coast defence artillery ..from textbook of ammunition 1936

Untitled250.jpg
 
Essentially a Naval version of the 117 but having a shorter intrusion and used over a gaine. 5 marks. Introduced 1930 - Obsolete 1959
Filled by G.B Sept 1943
Greenwood + Batley, Abbeywood, Kent.
N - Naval

Any other markings

Regards

Tim. G.
 
Thanks, great pictures Spotter i must try and get a copy of that book, and thanks to TimG for the other data on this i have had this fuze for about 10 years nice to find out about it. Short intrusion refers to the length of the striker? there is a small steel point about standing out from the bottom of the body about 6mm. There are no other markings that i can see. Except a small "H" in a square under the 4 of 9-43. The landward fuze would make sense as the field it came from is about half a mile from the beach.
Weasel.
 
Top