-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
02-15-2010 09:53 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
-
Thank You to Skippy For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member
IIRC the good folks at "No Man's Land" whom occasionally dig up WW1 battlefields have occasionally dug some up, confirming that this was indeed done.
-
Thank You to RobSmith For This Useful Post:
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
This is a dead horse subject. Among collectors of imperial german arms it has long been established that the reversal of bullets in S patrone was not for AP - it was simply used to shred the parapet of enemy trenches which were almost always shored up with sandbags.
The reversed bullets will not function form the 98 magazine and to load them singly in the rifle you need to start the rimless end of the cartrisge in the magazine so it go underneath the extractor.
You will rarely see this done on any other caliber as the 303 loaded with cordite and it's long neck make pulling the bullet a major undertaking and the lack of room for a turned turtle bullet due to the cordite loaded therein as well. This whole thing is more like an urban myth and should die like one.
-
Legacy Member
One thing I do know is my father who was a Lewis Gunner told me they would "nip" the end off .303 bullets and they did this quite frequentlly.
-
-
Legacy Member
gew98 there was a program on the history channel a little while back, describing this situation. I think it was on "finding the fallen".
They described the reversed bullets and explained their function after finding a sniper guard plate in an excavated trench.
They arranged a demonstration of the effect of reversed bullets on a made up sniper plate. It was demonstrated that the bullets wouldn't penetrate the plate but they would cause heat to be generated at the impact point and spalled a piece of shrapnel off the back of the plate, into the snipers face.
A rather nasty way of doing things, but any means it takes I guess.
-
Thank You to bearhunter For This Useful Post:
-
Well, I don't beieve even half of the crud they put on the History Channel, but if there's multiple "dug-up" finds of this odditity on WWI battlefields, it's still of interest.
-
-
Legacy Member
The matter is also discussed at lenght in a book "Out of nowhere" which discusses the history of sniping.

Originally Posted by
jmoore
Well, I don't beieve even half of the crud they put on the History Channel, but if there's multiple "dug-up" finds of this odditity on WWI battlefields, it's still of interest.
-