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Can any former British tanker provide some information on this M2 tripod?
Last edited by MG34_Dan; 09-25-2015 at 01:37 PM.
Reason: Spelling.
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09-25-2015 01:33 PM
# ADS
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I was an Armourer with The Royal Hussars for a short while in the very early 70's on Centurions and Chieftains, both of which had .50 and .30 Browning machine guns. They also had a .30" ground tripod housed in an external turret stowage bin. To my knowledge, they were all the bog standard US issue tripods. We also had some at the School of Infantry and they were the same bog standards too.
Maybe yours was sort-of adapted for use with the old BESA guns, but I doubt it as they weren't readily demountable from the tanks as were the old .30" Brownings.
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The answer probably lies in the severe foreign exchange controls that existed in Britain
post-war, and in particular the 'dollar gap'. With Lend-Lease abruptly terminated on 1st September 1945 and aid still in transit converted into a loan at 2%, which we only finished paying off a few years ago, there was an incentive to make domestically items which we were deficient in and capable of making.
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Didn't read the text accompanying the images...text deleted.
Last edited by RT Ellis; 09-25-2015 at 06:01 PM.
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I don't understand that Mk7........ If we/UK
were making them, they'd be in use in our 60's and 70's tanks and other AFV's surely? That cross pin retaining method is nothing I've ever seen before on machine guns. And we'd be using the standard Vckers method - and the Vickers type chain that came from Ordnance in 12" lengths.
I don't know of course but just putting across the negative side
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Except for the gun mounting pintle it looks like a bod standard GPMG M60 tripod
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Thank You to Aussie48 For This Useful Post:
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... That cross pin retaining method is nothing I've ever seen before on machine guns. ...
That method is exactly what is used on a commercial Colt M35 tripod from the inter war period. I know this because I have an ersatz Colt 1928 water cooled gun along with its period correct M35 tripod. A little less than 1000 of these were sold by Colt to Argentina
from 1928 through 1930. They made it back to the US in the late '80s where they were reincarnated.
My amateur photos below may not show the cross pin retaining method clearly, but I can assure you they are identical to the M2's above.


To correctly insert the M35 cross pins, one must position both cross pin handles to the 12:00 position and insert them. When the handles drop, the cross pins are locked.
On the M2 tripod pictured above, both cross pin handles are placed at the 9:00 position for insertion.
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Advisory Panel
We also had the cross pins like that on our M113 cradle mounts for the 1919A4/C5 MGs.
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Good idea to lock the pins but I'm just saying that I ain't seen them in UK
service in answer to the suggestion that the tripod might have come from the UK MIlitary. It would tend to suggest that whatever it is, it's a US origin tripod
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
There should be markings to that effect. There should be a small ID plate on it unless it's been removed. Maybe some engraved nomenclature on the head... Also, at the tripod head, there should be a ring of bronze around the pintle hole. Where that depression is...keeps things from rusting and allows some dry lubrication...
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