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Post Info TOPIC: 57mm from Schnuck - Russian help needed.


Major

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57mm from Schnuck - Russian help needed.
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This is the inscription on the Maxim-Nordenfelt from Schnuck, confirming its Russian provenance. Have we got any members who can read Russian?


The plate is very worn and this is the best I can do with the photo. A Russian bloke told me that the first 3 letters are initials and the big word begins with the Russian equivalent of ORD. He said the word means "armaments factory" so the word could well be "ordnance". The date is obviously 1900. If anyone can decipher the rest, it might identify the factory and tell us a bit about where the gun was between its arrival in Russia and its capture by the Germans. Any help much appreciated.


 



-- Edited by JamesH at 23:38, 2006-12-26

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Commander in Chief

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It reads:
"S.P.B. orudini zavod" which means "Sanct Petersburg ordnance factory".

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MZ


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mad zeppelin wrote:


It reads:
"S.P.B. orudini zavod" which means "Sanct Petersburg ordnance factory".




That's fantastic. Thanks.


Anyone know anything about this factory and what might have been done to the gun there?



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Captain

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James H wrote:

Anyone know anything about this factory and what might have been done to the gun there?





It would have been manufactured there, on license from Maxim in the UK.

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Legend

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Interesting. Max Hundelby implies that these guns were purchased from Britain, but you reckon they were actually made in Russia. I wonder if the same applies to the Belgian version?

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Legend

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J Fullerton wrote:


It would have been manufactured there, on license from Maxim in the UK.


When was the gun made? - if it were after 1897 the licence would be from Vickers Maxim, if 1911 or after just plain Vickers.  Maxim Nordenfelt existed as a company only from 1884 to 1897

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Captain

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Perhaps I'm completely mistaken, but that seemed like the obvious reading to me. Why else would the St petersburg factory stamp their name on the guns (and is it actually a additional nameplate, or an integral part of the casting? I can't tell from the picture)?

If they were direct export purchases rather than license built, wouldn't the british seller make them to the customer specifications for bore, if different from the original design? What modifications would be needed?



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Legend

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The inscription is stamped into the gun itself, and has the date 1900 at the bottom. It's worn very smooth - I had to spit on it to get a bit of contrast for the photo. Don't tell anyone.


That would seem to indicate that it was actually made in St. Petersburg.



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Field Marshal

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in the putilov works probably then


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Legend

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...........and licensed from Vickers Maxim rather than Maxim Nordenfelt

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For a number of reasons, I'm beginning to think that it wasn't a S.P license build now.

For one, this picture (let's see if I can manage to post it) of a different gun has similar engraved or stamped or etched or what have you labels in both Russian and Finnish from 1907 and 1936/1944, respectively. That suggests that the Finns added their own label to an existing gun that they neither manufactered nor, presumably, made significant alterations to. Perhaps the Russians chose to put their own label on the 57mm Nordenfelt. At the very least, the Finnish inscription shows that these labels need not be part of the original casting or forging.


Second, the fact that Belgium was another customer for the Nordenfelt made me curious about their ordnance production ability of that era. Ian Hogg in Allied Artillery of World War One has this to offer:

"In spite of there being two Belgium gunmakers, Cockerill and the Royal cannon Foundry, the Belgian Army boughtit's guns elsewhere, a 75mm (3in) design from Krupp and a 120mm (4.7in) howitzer from St Chamond in France. The 75mm Model 1905 was first bought complete from Krupp, then in components for assembly by Cockerill and the Cannon Foundry, and finally all components except the barrel came from Krupp while the barrel was made in Belgium from material procured from Britain." Maybe Russia had a similar arrangement with Vickers Maxim, either assembling the guns or manufacturing the barrel and assembling it with imported parts. Or maybe they didn't do anything except stamp their label on it, as the Finns would later do.

Another thing I'm wondering about is if the Saint Petersburg factory in question is indeed Putilov, or if it's Obukhov or someone else entirely. Putilov only started manufacturing artillery in 1900, so if it was them and they did major work on it, the 57mm Nordenfelt would have been one of their very first productions. It seems odd that the label on it doesn't say either "Putilovsky Zavod'" or "Obukhovsky Zavod'" (as my picture of the 1902 76mm does). Perhaps one or the other of those two factories was originally referred to as simply "S.P.B. Orudini Zavod"?

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the putilov factory manufactured cannons in the early 19th century so i am not sure if they stoped building them.

S.P.B orudni Zavod would seem to be a different factory but one that I am not familiar with, I will look for it.

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Ah, I wasn't aware of their earlier cannon production, and was just going off of the brief Wikipedia entry for the Putilov plant (now known as Kirov, apparently).

If a definitive date to the 57mm Nordenfelt design has been determined anywhere I'm afraid I've missed it. Could it possibly be as old as 1888? The following website has three photos of an 1888 57mm Belgian Cockerill-Nordenfelt gun, which looks similar to the rear details of the Mephisto buck mount shown in Hundelby and Strasheim, p 72.

http://www.rudi-geudens.be/html/oorlogsmuseum_belg_kanon_19_eeuw.htm

On the opposite page, I just noticed the drawn diagram attempts to reproduce what's legible of the factory stamp on the breech: "C.O.G.O........" in an arch above "1906" or "1900". This is in fact represents the gun from Schnuck, which we now know to be Russian rather than Belgian, as H & S thought at the time. They got the "C" (S) right, and read the cyrillic B as a "G".

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Field Marshal

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I think that the factory was the Izorski plant, or so an internet article says, Ill look more into it.
the Putilov changed names several times the Kirov was a Soviet Name, it was also the Red Putilov.

actually it appears it produced cannon balls in the early 19th century, so maybe it did begin producing artillery only in 1900. I should do a small article on the factory since it did play a big role in making wwi armored cars and guns.

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Poking around on the site linked to above, I saw another one in a sort of field gun setup (with an oddly curved shield), rather than the pedestal mount of the other specimen:

http://www.rudi-geudens.be/html/oorlogsmuseum_wo1_kanon.htm

They state that the 1888 is indeed the same animal used in the A7V. Given that the Belgians designate it as a Cockerill-Nordenfelt, I'm now doubtful again that this was a straightforward import gun. Cockerill must have done something with it (same as our S.P.B. Orudni Zavod'), either assembly or license build or something.

Cockerill's own website would seem to indicate that they manufactured them completely:
"1890 onwards
Following the acquisition of the “Nordenfelt” patents, Cockerill starts building guns and revolving turrets (cupolas) for military fortresses."


ETA: Oops! Sorry, James, I think I stole your photo by editing a spelling error.




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Legend

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J Fullerton wrote:
ETA: Oops! Sorry, James, I think I stole your photo by editing a spelling error.




That's all quite beyond me, I'm afraid. The main thing is that this is turning out to be quite interesting. Good oh.

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Commander in Chief

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A pre WW1 German army handbook on Russia list the St.Peterburg Arsenal (which would be the German translation of S.P.B. orudini zavod) as different entity apart from Ishorski and Putilov.

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Could it refer to the Obukhovsky plant?

Stephen Zaloga's Osprey book also confirms that the gun is the 1888. Pretty much every author I've encountered so far describes the guns as having been manufactured in Britain, and according to Mark Whitmore in Mephisto, that particular tank's gun is marked "Maxim Nordenfelt, 6pr CAP, No 5864" which does sound like a British build.

Maybe the various guns were a mixture of ages, and Mephisto had one of the very early ones before Cockerill aquired the patents and began it's own production of them? If the company changed it's name just three years after the 57mm was released, would they still say 'Maxim Nordenfelt' or 'Vickers Sons and Maxim Ltd'? I just noticed also that we have some conflicting dates for the separation; Centurion gave 1897 upthread, while H&S give 1891, while James' article and Wikipedia have 1890. In any event, would British production retain Thorsten Nordenfelt's name even after he was forced out of the company? If not that gives us a clue as to the indiviual age of Mephisto's gun (as does the serial number presumably).

If anyone is planning on a trip to the Belgian Royal Museum of the Army and Military History in Brussels, perhaps they could take a peek at the two Cockerill Nordenfelt 57mm guns from my links above and see what sort of name stamp is on them? That could prove illuminating.

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The one on socle mount carries:

COCKERILL - NORDENFELT
1895
5c7 CAP No 22

the one on wheels carries:

COCKERILL - NORDENFELT
1898
5,7c CAP No 221

In both cases, the "c" is in high position.

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MZ


Legend

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J Fullerton wrote:


Could it refer to the Obukhovsky plant?


Maybe the various guns were a mixture of ages, and Mephisto had one of the very early ones before Cockerill aquired the patents and began it's own production of them? If the company changed it's name just three years after the 57mm was released, would they still say 'Maxim Nordenfelt' or 'Vickers Sons and Maxim Ltd'? I just noticed also that we have some conflicting dates for the separation; Centurion gave 1897 upthread, while H&S give 1891, while James' article and Wikipedia have 1890. In any event, would British production retain Thorsten Nordenfelt's name even after he was forced out of the company? If not that gives us a clue as to the indiviual age of Mephisto's gun (as does the serial number presumably).





I think that the discrepancies in dates arise out of  the difference between when Vickers first acquired an interest (holding) in the company and when the name was changed so that the 1890 and 91 dates refer to Vickers acquiring an interest and one of the Vickers familly being appointed to the board whilst 97 is the legal name chage date - refered to then as Vickers Maxim. My source was primarily from Vickers related material.


If the gun was built in 1885 then this is only one year after the Maxim Nordenfeldt formation. As to when Nordenfeldt's name was dropped from products I suspect that would be when it best suited market demands - after all Maxim was still around when the British version of his gun was being called Vickers so the name thing could work two ways.



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Mad Zeppelin,
thanks for the lightening fast answer! Had you already noted that info down from a previous visit?

The fact that, unlike the Mephisto gun, they specifically state 'Cockerill-Nordenfelt' on the gun, reinforces the view that the earliest aquisitions would have been direct purchases from the UK with the Cockerill plant taking over production in the mid 1890s...if they produced an additional 200 guns between 1895 and 1898 that gives us a rate of roughly 66 per year, and the first Belgian built one done in 1894 or 1895.

The date of the Mephisto gun is unknown, but at serial number 5,864 the Maxim Nordenfelt plant must have been making them for quite a few years (and that quantity probably also included the Russian exports and possibly other customers).

It seems more likely to me all the time that the Russians followed a similar pattern, switching from direct purchases to domestic manufacture by at least 1900.

Does anyone know what "CAP" stands for?



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Best guess is "caponiere", which describes this type of gun in French. I've no idea what that would be in English, it means a gun controlling the trenches of a fortress.

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MZ


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mad zeppelin wrote:


Best guess is "caponiere", which describes this type of gun in French. I've no idea what that would be in English, it means a gun controlling the trenches of a fortress.


A caponiere (the French word is used in English descriptions) is a stone or concrete construction that is built in the bottom of a fortress ditch (not a trench). These were pierced for guns (small arms and light cannon) on either side allowing them to fire along the stretch of ditch that they commanded. They were way down below the level of the ditch (which could be 20 ft deep) so that they were protected from and siege guns. If the besiegers made it up the glacis, through the covered way and down into the ditch as part of an attempt to escallade the main ramparts they would be taken in enfilade fire by the caponiere. As forts became simpler in shape during the late 1800s  bastions, ravelins etc were dispensed with and more emphasis was placed on the role of the caponiere. Caponiere is not a gun type per se but a construction. A caponiere cannon would be a cannon placed in a caponiere but I have never seen any reference to a gun designed specifically just for this role

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You're right, the full title in French was:
"Canon de caponnière à tir rapide de 57 mm - Matériel de la Société Nordenfelt de Paris construit par la Société Cockerill de Seraing"
The Belgians had ordered 185 of these pieces for their Meuse forts. The Germans captured another quantity of these guns at the Russian Nowo-Georgiewsk fortress.


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In that case - the version:
Can be is a gun - a German "Russian" trophy? And Russian gun is a license English manufacture.

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Legend

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A question nobody seems to be addressing - where did the ammunition come from? Given that the guns on the A7Vs and the Beute Panzers were not manufactured in Germany where was the source of ammo?

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Some guns were designed primarily to be used in Fortresses, and especially light ones, like the small 76mm Putilov the Germans later used as an infantry gun, of course had their main duty in close defense, not least just as Carponiere pieces - and then firing canister shot. See here!

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Legend

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Well we need to differentiate between the gun and the equipment. Equipment being the artillery technical term for the combination of the gun and its carriage or mount. (Gun is often loosely used to define whole thing but if you look at many official designations you'll find a letter and number combination that defines the combination) The 76 mm Putilov gun being combined with a specially designed carriage to create a fortress piece (and which would naturally fire canister as shot or shell might damage some other part of the fortifications),the original gun not being specifically designed specifically for fortifications. The British 9.2 gun appears in many fortifications around the world on a variety of special carriages but it was originally a ships gun.The Maxim Nordenfeldt was used in many fortifications it seems, presumably with an appropriate carriage or mount, and Schnuck's gun might be ex fortification (or not). The only gun (as opposed to equipement) I know of specifically designed for fortress use only was a Krupp design in which the muzzle was ball shaped to allow it to be locked into an integral socket in a turret (avoiding the need for a recoil mechanism).

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1) The ammunition. Hundleby and Strasheim make no reference to it, but several sources say that large quantities were captured along with the guns. However, it seems the Germans were producing plenty of 57mm of their own.


The APK had ordered 8 of Rheinmetall's design for a 57mm Infanteriegeschutz, but they weren't finished when the War ended. However, according to Herbert Jaeger the plan was for the A7V to be stocked with a mix of delayed impact fuse, armour-piercing, and canister. A "super-quick" fuse was specified later. It seems unlikely that this assortment was lying ready-made in Belgian and Russian armouries, so the Germans must have been producing their own.


2) The caponiere question. Jaeger says the following: "The APK also tried out another 5.7cm Infanteriegeschutz, really an anti-tank gun, built from the tube of a Belgian ditch defence fortress gun, mounted on a shortened FK96 n/A carriage".The Germans referred to them by the term Kasemattkanonen. There's an illustration of one with the crew loading armour-piercing shells.


7.7s had already been mounted on 4-ton trucks for anti-tank purposes, and now "all available Belgian 5.7s were mounted in the same way". They were on a swivel mount known to the Belgians as affut a crinoline because of its resemblance to the conical frock fashionable at the time.


All this comes together with the withdrawal of the idea of the 57mm on a 77mm carriage because it would have disrupted production of the standard 77. "The tubes were later used to arm the German Tanks."


So the caponiere bit rings true, and the ammunition must have been produced specifically for the gun. Does this make sense?



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Greetings from Sydney, my first post here.
I've been trying to put together an accurate artical for Wikipedia for the 6-pounder (57-mm) Nordenfelt gun, primarily as used by Britain. My first source is I V Hogg whose info I trust. But I'm interested to read here about other variations from Belgium and Russia.

I understand that Nordenfelt sold out to Maxim and left to start a new company, Nordenfelt de Paris, in about 1890. This appears also the time Cockerill Belgium acquired access to Nordenfelt plans and began to manufacture a version. Images I've seen of the breech look very different to those in British service. Does anybody know whether in fact there are 2 unrelated families of guns, both with Nordenfelt attached to them ? i.e. the British Maxim-Nordenfelt, who I understand had the rights to the original design; and the new Nordenfelt company ?

Normally you would not be able to keep using the same design if you've sold it, you would have to start with a new design. Is this what Nordenfelt did ?
Rod

-- Edited by rcbutcher at 09:43, 2008-08-31

-- Edited by rcbutcher at 09:43, 2008-08-31

-- Edited by rcbutcher at 09:44, 2008-08-31

-- Edited by rcbutcher at 11:12, 2008-08-31

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taz


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With regards to Nordenfelt starting a new company. According to this, Nordenfelt was restricted until 1919 from making guns and ammunition.

Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co. Ltd [1894] AC 535

A 19th century English case decided by the House of Lords. It defines the 'blue pencil test' as a method for deciding whether contractual obligations can be partially enforced when the obligation as drafted in the contract has an element of illegality.

The dispute was about restraint of trade. Thorsten Nordenfelt, a manufacturer specialising in armaments, had sold his business to Hiram Stevens Maxim. They had agreed that Nordenfelt would not make guns or ammunition anywhere in the world, and would not compete with Maxim in any way for a period of 25 years.

The court held that:

  • The provision prohibiting Nordenfelt from making guns or ammunition was reasonable.
  • The providing banning competition, in any way, was unenforceable as an unreasonable restraint of trade.

The question on severability was whether the reasonable restriction could be enforced when it was in the same contract as an unreasonable and unenforceable restriction. The court used the test of striking out (with a blue pencil) words containing unreasonable provisions would leave behind a contractual obligation that still made sense. If it did, then the amended contract would be enforced by the court.

In this case, the unreasonable restraint was severable, and the court enforced the amended agreement that Nordenfelt "for the next 25 years, would not make guns or ammunition anywhere in the world, and would not compete with Maxim in any way."

Regards Eddie



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Thanks Eddie.. does that imply that any guns later made with the name Nordenfelt attached to them (e.g. the "Cockerill-Nordenfelt"), had to be licensed from Maxim-Nordenfelt of the UK ? The legal judgement seems to imply that Nordenfelt was restricted to acting as a consultant, e.g. on the French 75 ? The agreement does not appear to have pushed Nordenfelt out of the arms business or prevented him giving his name to products, just prevented him from being a manufacturer. It doesn't appear to have prevented him from teaming up with an existing manufacturer and giving technical advice : is this what happened ? Does anybody know who Cockerill got the4ir Nordenfelt plans from : Maxim ?
thanks
Rod

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taz


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Hi Rod,

I would certainly imagine that any guns had to be licensed from Maxim-Nordenfelt.
Cockerill aquired the Nordenfelt patents, which I assume included plans, because soon afterwards they started building guns and revolving turrets.

The role as an advisor/consultant would seem to fall under the second part of the case, (The providing banning competition, in any way, was unenforceable as an unreasonable restraint of trade). Which as you state, wouldn't prevent him from working with the French or anyone else he chose to.

Regards Eddie

-- Edited by taz at 13:54, 2008-08-31

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