I visited this Museum twice within the last few years (Sep 2011 and Dec 2013). They have an extensive artillery collection. They recently started renovating the area covering WW I, where most artillery was on display, so I have no idea what's visible right now. They also run temp exhibitions, during my visit in 2011 I was very lucky, the temp display was about prototypes and I've got quite a rare opportunity to see unique artillery pieces. I am opening this thread to cherry pick a few pictures, maybe this will trigger some interesting discussions too.
Please note I am not an expert in WW I artillery, I can provide pictures, but not that much knowledge on the topic.
Let's start with some interesting mountain artillery prototypes:
Were these Skoda guns or built by the Wien Arsenal? I can see some Skoda design elements but other parts look quite different from usual Skoda practice.
At one point during WW I the Austo-Hungarian Army was looking for a larger, more powerful caliber for their field artillery, but concerns about standardization prevailed. In fact we are talking mostly about prototypes here.
I couldn't remember the details but it sounds right. Wasn't there also an 88mm gun which used the carriage of the 10.4cm Kanone M15 - or was that a post-WW1 Italian development?
32 cm Minenwerfer 1909 prototype. A unique, very rare piece. I saw it mentioned on an Italian book about Austro-Hungarian trench artillery, but I never saw a picture before. It really looks like a medieval weapon
It's also interesting since it proves that the Austrians were already considering field mortars years before WW I
Glad you like it Roger. In fact I am thinking about posting pictures from Bucharest and Belgrade too (I've covered Sofia in a dedicated thread already). Bucharest and Belgrade museums host very interesting collections and on top of that I have a few questions about some pieces I would like to ask around.
This piece is off-topic, but since it's very rare an interesting, I am posting it anyway. I am sure everybody know the 47 mm Bohler gun, it was widely used during WW II, by many armies and, at the outbreak of the war, it was considered among the best guns of its class. Well, the 47 mm has a less well-know ancestor, a 44 mm model, I once read about it, but I've never seen any pictures, but I luckly saw one in Wien, as part of their temp display:
Glad you like it Roger. In fact I am thinking about posting pictures from Bucharest and Belgrade too (I've covered Sofia in a dedicated thread already). Bucharest and Belgrade museums host very interesting collections and on top of that I have a few questions about some pieces I would like to ask around.
Massimo
Your pictures are excellent, Massimo, thank you so much for sharing them. I would be very grateful if you posted some from Bucharest - especially if you have some shots of the Russian Obuchov M1904 76mm Mountain gun they have there. I believe it is the only still on its original wheeled carriage. Thank you!
Matt
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“[B]ut these tanks are machines, their caterpillars run on as endless as the war, they are annihilation, they roll without feeling into the craters, and climb up again without stopping..." -Erich Maria Remarque
That's the one, thank you! I look forward to your future posts.
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“[B]ut these tanks are machines, their caterpillars run on as endless as the war, they are annihilation, they roll without feeling into the craters, and climb up again without stopping..." -Erich Maria Remarque
This piece is off-topic, but since it's very rare an interesting, I am posting it anyway. I am sure everybody know the 47 mm Bohler gun, it was widely used during WW II, by many armies and, at the outbreak of the war, it was considered among the best guns of its class. Well, the 47 mm has a less well-know ancestor, a 44 mm model, I once read about it, but I've never seen any pictures, but I luckly saw one in Wien, as part of their temp display:
Hello,
I'm very interesting in this Bohler gun. Since early 1920s many Bohler engineers and foremen were sent to Mukden in Northeast China to help establish an arsenal there under Marshal Chang Tso-lin, in order to keep their ability in weapon manufacture. They built the Type 14(1925) 7.7cm field gun(technically a Bohler M. 18 with 7.7cm barrel from Skoda M. 17 gun) and 10.5cm light howitzer(utilizing the same carriage as M. 18) and probably other guns for Chang's army. Since the work on Bohler 47mm started from about mid-1920s, is it possible that they made the first design in Mukden? Any further information about this 44mm gun?
I've only seen schematics (with dimensions helpfully appended) of the carriage for the 24cm gun, but that carriage was identical to the carriage for the 38cm howitzer (it was used for the first series of 38cm weapons, apparently, but that appears to be what the museum example is anyway). They appear in Michal Prasil's Skoda Heavy Guns. They appear to be proportionally correct, though lacking fine details, so I imagine they could be used as a basis for producing your own scale plans.
-- Edited by Roger Todd on Monday 28th of July 2014 09:05:30 PM
I have many additional pictures showing details, I could make them available if anybody is interested.
I took pictures in Bucharest too and will open a dedicate thread about those.
I have many additional pictures showing details, I could make them available if anybody is interested. I took pictures in Bucharest too and will open a dedicate thread about those.
Massimo
Definitely, please! That would be wonderful, thank you, I'm sure many people would love that!
I have many additional pictures showing details, I could make them available if anybody is interested. I took pictures in Bucharest too and will open a dedicate thread about those.
Definitely, please! That would be wonderful, thank you, I'm sure many people would love that!
I collected all the pictures I have, thiese are 79, very large jpeg files. The vast majority are unprocessed, uncropped, out of camera shots, not up to the quality standards of the ones I usually post on Flickr, but I kept them all because they may show additional details. The pictures are contained inside a huge zip file, it's a 1 Gb beast that will take a lot of time to download, you definitely need some decent bandwidth to get it. Please keep in mind it will be available only for a very limited amount of time, I just can't kept such a large file on my server forever, if you want pics, get them asap: http://www.massimocorner.com/afv/38cm_wien.zip