-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Continued Education
Can some one please enlighten me about the packaging of .303 British
ammunition? All that I have seen are boxed in 32 round boxes which seems a strange number for a Rifle that has a Magazine capacity of 10 rounds. Is this the result of British eccentricy or is there something I'm missing here? Thank you.
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
06-15-2009 09:22 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Banned
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Thank you. I feel much better now.
-
Advisory Panel
The cardboard ammunition boxes were never intended to equate to the magazine capacity of any particular small arm. After all, there were many possible .303 weapons and magazine capacities - rifle, Lewis gun (normal and big mags), Hotchkiss, Vickers, etc.
The cardboard boxes are merely of a convenient size and dimension to be able to fit into standard wooden/tin small arms ammo crates: either 39 (sometimes just 38) of the 32-round boxes with individual dividers, or 26 of the 48-round boxes where the rounds lie in rows - total 1248 rounds in the crate. The size and dimensions of these standard crates are themselves a holdover from Martini-Henry days, and represent a size & weight that is just about manageable by a single man.
-
-
Legacy Member
It appears that there are people on the web more ate up with ammunition packaging than with Lee-Enfields. Sorry I even looked.
At one site I found a box for 8mm Besa. So whay did the Brits use the 8X57 in tanks?
British Ammo packaging
You may have to register here to view all of their boxes and packages.
BOCN Bundles
Last edited by ireload2; 06-16-2009 at 02:24 PM.
-
-
We used 7.92mm in our old BESA tank machine guns. But as soon as the British
tasted the 'new' .300" Browning in the warime tanks, the old BESA was sidelined. The first post war tanks used the BESA but thereafter, the Mk3 Centurion reverted to the old favourite and unstoppable Browning M1919's. The old BESA continued on in service on Churchill recovery, bridgelayer and other 'funnies' until 1966 when the last BESA's were scrapped
-
-
Legacy Member
In view of the limited role of the BESA it was reluctantly accepted in the 7.92mm calibre, as it was not possible to alter the design to shoot .303
-
-
Legacy Member
-
-
Legacy Member
Yanks with No4s

Originally Posted by
ireload2
In watching post Normandy documentary footage I have seen a
German
soldier with a #4Mk1T and in the
Italian
campaign apparently a USGI or an someone dressed in US battle dress was mopping up Italian ruins with a #4Mk1.
I have seen old newsreel footage which apparently shows the first link up of British
and American troops in one part of NW Europe and it quite clearly shows the American soldier armed with a No4. I suppose the reporters of the day wouldn't have been above getting some Tommy to dress up in an American uniform and have the clip posed.
-
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
harry mac
I have seen old newsreel footage which apparently shows the first link up of
British
and American troops in one part of NW Europe and it quite clearly shows the American soldier armed with a No4. I suppose the reporters of the day wouldn't have been above getting some Tommy to dress up in an American uniform and have the clip posed.
It would also have made sense for bridgehead flanks to contain liaison parties from the other national contingents, but to temporarily arm them with the weapons supported in that bridgehead in case the link-up is delayed or fails. I.e. there were probably British liaison troops on Omaha armed with M1s, etc.
-