I am in the process of modelling this fascinating, historical gun in SolidWorks. Have attached raw renders of the current state. Comments are welcome; there are still a lot of details missing and/or unclear, but at least the overall proportions are way better than the Takom kit. My sources are the nice drawings from this forum (uploaded by Arie Dijkhuis) and the model from the Paris Army Museum, that I went to see earlier in the year.
I have been fascinated with this weapon of mass destruction ever since seeing a photo in Guinness Book of Records, Danish edition ca. 1972, that turned out to be Cherubin's wooden full-size model.
To my knowledge, Arie Dijkhuis' drawings are the best available. He created plans for the two initial prototype guns sent to the field in August 1914 and the later production models built in 1915. There have been a few other people who embarked on projects to create detailed drawings, but as far as I know they never published anything.
Yes, I have read Marc's book - it gives a great overview of the whole weapons system with all the different variants.
To my eyes, the Takom model have a trail and a trunnion that are too sleek, and the trunnion is mounted too far forward and too low. And the blast shield is too vertical.
I have done a quick Photoshop mock-up of what I think is a more correct geometry:
Thanks for your post. I enjoyed your book about the Berthas a lot.
From an engineering perspective, I am really keen to know more about the firing procedure for big mortars in detail. I wonder if you know of any sources...?
The Paris model has a front platform (in front of the shield), which I didn't model. I wonder what this was for, and how widely it was used, because in all the many images have seen, it only appears in a couple?
Steen's renders look excellent! Far better proportions than the Takom model. For some time I was trying to create my own plans of the Bertha, and had been in correspondence with Arie a few years ago (he very kindly sent me early drafts of his work on the Bertha). I missed the plans he uploaded here last year, but attached is basically as far as I got.
An update showing the current state of the Solidworks 3d model with new renders. I am looking for info on the brackets used to guide/attach the ammunition tray to the breech. Several pics shows a flat-ish, detachable bracket mounted on the breech, but the Aberdeen Bertha had what looks to be guide wheels mounted in a horizontal plane. How did these engage the ammunition tray? Can anyone shed light on these devices....?
Superb progress, Steen! I wonder if those horizontal wheels are nothing to do with the ammunition tray but were, rather, to help guide the barrel into the cradle during assembly? Just a thought.
Thanks Roger
Interesting thought that the guide-wheels could be for some other purpose; although they do seem slightly underwhelming for guidance of a 13 t barrel. Again, this is a detail that I have only seen pictures of on the Aberdeen Bertha, all other guns, that I know of, have a flat-ish, T-shaped bracket....?
Beautiful impressive work and very welcome. Although I have already built the TAKOM kit and were able to adjust a few details, based on your excellent drawings I will make a new model.
Big Bertha was a "secret" weapon and just a few usable photo's exists. As with many photo's taken the perspective is almost everytime from a standing uprigth position. Sometimes photo's published are copies from copies loosing details. Printing quality can be poor as well.....
Thanks for your comments Harry
I also bought the Takom kit with the intention of redesigning the parts that needs improvement using CAD, but there are so many details that are dodgy, that it is very hard to decide what to keep and what to redesign, so the project hasn't taken off yet....!
Thanks Roger Interesting thought that the guide-wheels could be for some other purpose; although they do seem slightly underwhelming for guidance of a 13 t barrel. Again, this is a detail that I have only seen pictures of on the Aberdeen Bertha, all other guns, that I know of, have a flat-ish, T-shaped bracket....?
You're right, looking more carefully (rather than making a knee-jerk reply without looking!) at the large Aberdeen photo, I see the horizontal wheels are actually attached to the rear face of the breech-ring, not to the cradle and thus cannot have the purpose I speculated upon. Perhaps, though, they were to loop cables around as part of a sort of windlass-type setup for pulling the barrel into the cradle during assembly?
Just a little update showing my findings regarding the accuracy (or lack of same) of the Takom Big Bertha model. The attached drawing shows just how much too long both the trail and the barrel are, making the overall size much too large. I am presently reverse engineering the Takom kit in CAD with the intention of revising the most glaring mistakes in order to produce a more accurate model.
Fantastic progress, Steen! I must say that after my initial enthusiasm at the release of the Takom model a couple of years ago or whenever it was, I've become very disillusioned by it. There are so many errors, not least of which being that it's basically over-sized quite apart from proportional errors, detail errors etc., that it's impossible to modify it to make it accurate, you may as well build one from scratch.
After doing a comparison using Photoshop, I'm pleased to see that my old scale drawings (well, early stages anyway, I never finished them) are very close to yours in overall proportions...
Seeing as you're working up your drawings in a CAD programme, are you considering using it as a basis to get all the parts 3D-printed as a kit?
Just wanted to share access to my 3d model on GrabCAD for those who would like to take a closer look: grabcad.com/library/dicke-berta-1
When you open the model in the 3d viewer, you can spin it around, make cut views, measure dimensions, etc.
Cheers,
Steen
Not all the images are of Dicke Bertha - there are 3 of Emil Cherubin's wooden model of the Dicke Bertha which toured Germany in the 1930s. - thanks to Roger Todd who wrote the appendix to the main article in Landships II [http://landships.info/landships/artillery_articles.html?load=/landships/artillery_articles/42cm_M_Gerat.html]
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Thursday 14th of October 2021 11:11:58 PM