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Contributing Member
Another addition
Just arrived this 75mm M18 1940 Shell case sadly it has been polished but over all the condition is very good the case mouth is not banged up like most of the shell cases I purchase.
The one thing that I wish to know the seller stated it is from a Sherman tank and it is marked Normal loading they had others marked Super possibly for the A/T projectile and Reduced loads.
Anyway the question I am asking the Sherman did not enter service till 1942 then the chances of it being fired from one are minimal at best even though it was used by them.
I have a feeling it may have been a field piece pretty much impossible to prove.
Either way its a nice clean addition 303 case for scale
The maker BB Co I have no hits for can anyone assist with identification of the maker of this shell case thank you.cheers:
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Last edited by CINDERS; 06-21-2018 at 11:22 AM.
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06-21-2018 12:11 AM
# ADS
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Deceased May 2nd, 2020
Hi Cinders,
These are my 75mm Shell casings bought home from France by my father in March 1919. These are battle field pick ups that the French made into souvenirs for sale to American troops. The two in front are anti tank rounds and are inert. I have others but they are in really bad shape. I do have an inert 75mm projectile that was evidently a dud which someone demilled. You can see on the nose cap where it hit and on the rotating ring where the rifling took. I do not know the head stamp of these cases.
I just looked at the case marked "Argonne' and it has the head stamp: 75 DE C around the top of the primer , and the annotation ATE 703L 18 C .
FWIW
Yours is in nice shape. I think that exposed to the air,your case may pick up a nice patina.
Imgur: The magic of the Internet
Last edited by Cosine26; 06-21-2018 at 01:10 PM.
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Legacy Member
The artillery used a different case . The M3 tank , the "Lee" , was introduced in late 1940 and it's M2 75mm gun used the same ammo as it's later M3 75mm gun that was mounted in the M4 Shermans .
Chris
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"...seller stated it is from a Sherman tank..." The M18 was used in AT, artillery and tank guns from long before W.W. II. Same ammo was used in the French '75, the American 75-mm M1897, M1917 field guns, and the M2 tank gun on the M3 Lee/Grant tank and the main gun on the M4 Sherman. So at least he's not lying. snicker.
Spelling and Grammar count!
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Sunray is correct . I was thinking of the WW2 adopted artillery . It was also used in the USMC M3 halftrack ( which used the earlier 1897 cannons mounted in the rear ) as well as the later M24 Chaffee tank and in the nose of the B-25 Mitchel bombers .
Chris
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Deceased May 2nd, 2020
Here is a description of the smaller shell.
FWIW
M1916 37mm gun
The M1916 37mm gun was developed by the French and used primarily by French and American forces in WWI for destroying machine gun emplacements. It was fairly good at this under fluid, mobile conditions, but inferior to mortars for static trench warfare. It was still in limited service by World War II, but generally relegated to training and use as a sub-caliber addition for larger guns.
Ammunition was of two types initially, a 1-pound solid steel shell and a high explosive round. The solid round was found to be largely ineffective, and replaced with a bursting shell of cast iron and filled with black powder. Mounting for the gun was either a fixed tripod or wheeled carriage.
Mechanically, the M1916 used a rotating breechblock and hydraulic recoil absorber coupled with a spring recuperator. In addition to use as an infantry gun, the M1916 was also mounted in the early US M1917 Renault tank.
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Deceased May 2nd, 2020
For Cinders
Here is the Demilled projectile
N0 1 shows the round dis assembled to show that it is inert
No2 shows the nose
No3 Shows the assembled projectile
No 4 shows the nose cap
In Nos 3 & 4 you can see whee the projectile impacted. You can see where the rotting band contacted the rifling on 1 & 3
I can find no other markings
FWIW
https://i.imgur.com/sNTLJK6.jpg
Imgur: The magic of the Internet
https://i.imgur.com/HbgH9RG.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/8R7TWIR.jpg
Last edited by Cosine26; 06-21-2018 at 05:54 PM.
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Contributing Member
I thought of the Lee Grant with the sponson mounted 75mm as I could not see a 1940 shell sitting there till 1942 waiting for use in the M4 hopefully someone will be able to tell me the makers name of the shell case.
Thank you all for your replies.
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Deceased May 2nd, 2020
For Cinders.
Here is a complete round. Picked up around St. Mihiel or the Argonne area. Unfortunately the case has been altered to make a vase but is the correct length I believe. Brought home by my father in 1919. He was at St. Mihiel and the Argonne with the AEF for the Argonne and St Mihiel from August through November 1918.
INERT , of course, as previously indicated. I think that the imgur will allow you to enlarge these photos.
https://i.imgur.com/Ly8dy7F.jpg
I believe that I have posted this earlier.
https://i.imgur.com/nMY9Voo.jpg
Last edited by Cosine26; 07-01-2018 at 05:54 PM.
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