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Post Info TOPIC: Looks WW1-ish!


Commander in Chief

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Looks WW1-ish!
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General

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It is a US 3 Inch M1902 or possibly M1905.  These were used in the Mexican Expedition and for training state-side in WWI but were not used in Europe in WW1.

By the way, the wheels are wrong.  They should be 57 inch Achiebald wheels.

 

R/

Ralph



-- Edited by Ralph Lovett on Sunday 29th of April 2012 07:06:56 PM

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Ralph Lovett


Legend

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Ralph - is it the one that the U.S. tried to adapt for use during the War but couldn't perfect?



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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.



General

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No, I think you are talking about the US 3 inch M1916 with a split trail and a recoil mechanism made by St Chamond.

R/

Ralph



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Ralph Lovett


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Ah. Thanks, Ralph. Will look it up.



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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.



Legend

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I think the 3 inch M1916 may have been superceded by events - the US Army used the French 75m mle 1897 in France and the French gun was manufactured under licence in the US. There probably wasn't a lot to choose between the guns in terms of performance so the US Army probably went with what they were used to. The Wikipedia oracle notes the 3 inch M1916 was on inventory until 1942 and saw some use as an anti-aircraft gun.

The interwar US version of the Mle 1897 wound up looking a lot like the M1916 with split trails. At least the US got its money's worth out of the Mle 1897 - even appeared in modified form as the M3 tank gun in WW2.

Regards,

Charlie



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