ww2 brass shell casings for sale
Price | No Ratings | Service | No Ratings | Flowers | No Ratings | Delivery Speed | No Ratings | 4/7/2023, Edged Weapons
One round as shown in the photo. The mine, when fitted with a M604 fuze, is activated by the weight of an intermediate or heavy tank. of the Kromex product was made using surplus aluminium and brass shell casings and offered for sale. This one has a number of moderate dings around the shoulder and mouth area and numerous smaller dings in the rest of the case which has been polished, but the job has not been finished yet. A firing pin in the center of the cap will then ignite the primer and the signal will be fired. It worked effectively, but was heavy and slow to move, and by the end of the war was being replaced by a similar gun mounted on the M10 Tank Destroyers. See photo for details. This case is in excellent condition, with sharp headstamp markings:
This proved to be a successful design, and Schneider then decided to modified it for a French 105 mm round. No hole in the case, but easy to add if you like. Good rotating band. 3D printed. The projectile was added to the fired case, presumably from the company doing the development work. Overall length about 7 inches, body diameter about 3.2 inches and 3.6 inches across the surface of the studs on the rotating band. CHEAP! cap. These were a series of guns starting with the Model 1918 anti-aircraft gun. They were made in many sizes, 10 and 20 pounders for field use (with the 3 inch and 3.67 inch barrels weighing 890 and 1795 pounds respectively). Brass casings are available in three different primer flash hole sizes: .057 (small), .074 (standard), and .110 (BMG 50). The projectile is standard U.S.N. The M775 PD fuze functions on impact with superquick action only. Some of the Hispano-Suiza type guns were also mounted as anti-aircraft weapons in army tanks or halftrack variants. Price for one cartridge $8.00 (View Picture), 22141 10 LINK, BELT, METALLIC, CAL .50 M2- ORIGNAL WW2- NEW OLD STOCK - Full original box of 10 links for the Browning .50 caliber machine guns. Hawkinsons book indicates that was the purpose of the T19 case but I cannot find anything about the T99 Gun I think these are all related to developments for the 76mm Gun M7 used on tank destroyers, but am not sure. $375.00 (View Picture), 3925 Rare 1.65 Hotchkiss Mountain Gun Canister round by UMC 1919 dated - The 1.65 inch (or 42 x 150mmR or 2 pounder) Hotchkiss round was used in the Hotchkiss Mountain Gun adopted by the Army in the 1870s, replacing the earlier muzzle loading mountain howitzers. $40.00 (View Picture), 20613 Chinese 75 x 185mm R Brass cartridge case for the Japanese Type 41 Mountain Gun - The Type 41 Mountain Gun was a license-built copy of the Krupp M.08 mountain gun. (Broomhandle). ARTILLERY FUZE, DEMILLED - The Point-Detonating Fuze (PDF) M557 was standardized in 1967 and is one of the most widely used of all Western-bloc fuzes, as it is used with ammunition fired from guns and howitzers of virtually all standard calibers as well as with 4.2 in mortars. Photo shows typical example of the few we have (all in similar condition), but not necesessarily the exact round you will receive. Price each is $22.00 (View Picture), 13550 U.S. NAVY 3/50 VT (NON-FRAG) CARTRIDGE (INERT) (76.2 x 585mmR) - This is a handsome complete INERT round with Mark 9 Mod 0 steel case made by Norris in 1979. INERT- no flammable or explosive components. This is an unfired example that was unloaded years ago and is now INERT, with no explosive or flammable components. The nose is drilled with a tapered hole for a wooden fuze plug unlike the more sophisticated federal shells which used threaded plugs. 216 of these were in service at the beginning of the WW1.
Two fired, empty, INERT cases
These fired a 6 pound projectile (duhh!) $85.00 (View Picture), 21645 U.S. 20 x 110mm (Hispano Suiza) Dummy Cartridge M18A3 (Single round) - The 20 x 110mm (Hispano-Suiza) aircraft cannon was widely used by the British and U.S. aircraft during WW2.
Former owner (I think it was COL Berkeley R. Lewis) marked in ink Brit 1st Aden?, 86 mm cs. 3/10/2023, US Militaria
SC 49, Loaded 17-50. New condition, fresh from a sealed 25 round can which was marked 25 Cartridges, Drill M18A3, Lot No. 10/25/2022
However, no complete list has been found of all approvals, so with only a few scattered examples the best I can do is estimate that this was circa 1960s-1980s, but I believe the basic model dates to 1952. The fat wing section of the mine is filled with a liquid explosive. Primer removed. It delivers 88 dual-purpose grenades to defeat armor and personnel targets. This was used with all three of the main German 105mm field guns during WW1, along with an earlier 1898 model. The 20 x 110mm (Hispano-Suiza) aircraft cannon was widely used by the British and U.S. aircraft during WW2. Eventually they were mounted in some (but not all) P-38 Lightning and P-61 Black Widow fighters, the B-29 Superfortress, and mainly in the Navys F4U-1C Corsair and later post-war Navy fighters. The SRTR is designed to be fired, recovered, refurbished, and refired. Jap Type 90, 94 or 97 HE rounds weighed from 9 to 12 pounds, but I am not sure exactly what the Chinese used. $225.00 (View Picture), 21921 -SCARCE WW1 ERA U.S. 3 INCH STOKES MORTAR PROJECTILE (81mm) (RELIC) - The 3 inch Stokes mortar was well known and widely used by the men of the A.E.F. This covers virtually the whole globe, from European powers to backwater nations of Asia or South America. 3/9/2023, US Militaria
A good relic of trench warfare, or trim it down for wind chimes or flower pot, or whatever you like. After some introductory and biographical information on Hotchkiss, the next 250 pages details the myriad 37mm guns designed by Hotchkiss, PLUS those designed by other such as Driggs Seabury, Nordenfelt, Skoda, Krupp, with line drawings of nearly all, and with lots of detailed information on numbers procured, when, from whom, and how employed- naval broadside or fighting top mounts, fortress flank defenses, field carriages, etc, often down to the specific site or vessel. CARTRIDGE, 1 in. This one is dated May 1918 and except for the last two inches at the mouth is in pretty nice shape. This means the end of the cartridge case has to be plugged with something to keep the powder in and water and crud out. This is the nicest condition of all, free from even minor dings or dents. . Upon impact, the SRTR emits a flash, bang, and smoke discharge but no fragmentation. The copper or brass fuze plug is in place, for use with the tapered paper fuzes. Longarms
These are all INERT examples. $195.00 (View Picture), 20967 U.S. I am unable to locate any information at all on the 3 inch/50 Mark 33 projectile but assume it was probably a very limited production item that was discarded in favor of other designs, leaving some in inventory for use in tests like this. These, along with PISTOL-PROJECTOR RED FLARE PARACHUTE/ USCG APP NO and maker name SIGNAL PYROTECHNIC, Los Angeles, CA are also stamped on the flare case body near the mouth.
Compass Bearing Between Two Cities,
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ww2 brass shell casings for sale