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Post Info TOPIC: WW1 Centenary - the 18 Pounder Project


Legend

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WW1 Centenary - the 18 Pounder Project
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Nearing completion, "The ANZAC Centenary Gun":

http://artilleryhistory.org/ad_18_pound_project.html

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-02-17/horse-drawn-wwi-18-pounder-gun-carriage-centenary/6127210

... Steve



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Legend

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Incidentally - this reference, http://xbradtc.com/2011/12/17/18-pdr-and-m1917/ appears to answer the question of the rope cladding of the recuperator tube seen in some examples.  "Often a crews wrapped a rope around the outside spring housing for additional protection of the tube (mostly against dents that would block the motion of the springs)."  If correct, this applied to the hydraulic-spring buffer-recuperator system of the Mk I, those problematic springs (breaking and weakening mentioned in numerous references) being replaced by a drop-in replacement hydraulic-pneumatic system in British service (Mk I*, Mk 2/2*?).

Not sure that point has been resolved in earlier discussions here - there was a suggestion the rope was for heat management (when dampened) but can't find anything else offhand.



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Rob


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I've seen mention it was done at Gallipoli as protection from enemy bullets/shrapnel owing to how exposed our artillery tended to be out there

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