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  1. #1
    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    Sunday afternoon Sport WW2 fashion.

    While driving his Ford van near Colchester, Essex my grandfather was attacked by a Germanicon fighter firing machine guns and 20mm cannon. This one hit his van but failed to explode and so he kept it as a souvenir. It has since been made completely safe including the cap by having all explosive material removed. My family referred to being shot at on the ground by German fighters as Sunday afternoon sport although it could happen any day of the week. It started happening after the fall of France and it was normally a lone German fighter flying from a Frenchicon air field which would fly low over the channel to avoid radar and would have enough fuel for about 10 minutes of flying over Essex before having to return home.


    In a separate but similar incident my father who was a child at the time was playing in the garden when a German fighter came in at no more than tree top level and opened fire with machine guns. I don't believe that my father was the target but it was in fact the Britishicon solders, camped near by, who were; they returned fire with their rifles. They pilot couldn't care less that there was a child, my father, between his guns and his target. My father well remembers seeing the outline of the German pilot through the persplex canopy. Fortunately, my father wasn't hit but I don't know about the soldiers.
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    Last edited by Flying10uk; 05-14-2016 at 05:53 AM.

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    A Collector's View - The SMLE Short Magazine Lee Enfield 1903-1989. It is 300 8.5x11 inch pages with 1,000+ photo’s, most in color, and each book is serial-numbered.  Covering the SMLE from 1903 to the end of production in India in 1989 it looks at how each model differs and manufacturer differences from a collecting point of view along with the major accessories that could be attached to the rifle. For the record this is not a moneymaker, I hope just to break even, eventually, at $80/book plus shipping.  In the USA shipping is $5.00 for media mail.  I will accept PayPal, Zelle, MO and good old checks (and cash if you want to stop by for a tour!).  CLICK BANNER to send me a PM for International pricing and shipping. Manufacturer of various vintage rifle scopes for the 1903 such as our M73G4 (reproduction of the Weaver 330C) and Malcolm 8X Gen II (Unertl reproduction). Several of our scopes are used in the CMP Vintage Sniper competition on top of 1903 rifles. Brian Dick ... BDL Ltd. - Specializing in British and Commonwealth weapons Specializing in premium ammunition and reloading components. Your source for the finest in High Power Competition Gear. Here at T-bones Shipwrighting we specialise in vintage service rifle: re-barrelling, bedding, repairs, modifications and accurizing. We also provide importation services for firearms, parts and weapons, for both private or commercial businesses.
     

  4. #2
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Nice piece...I'm surprised it didn't go clean through the car front to back or side to side...and carry on.
    Regards, Jim

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    Contributing Member CINDERS's Avatar
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    Practically undamaged nose fuse.

    As story from WWII about some 20mm that entered a B-17's fuel tank and failed to explode; during a raid a B-17 copped a hiding from a ME-109 with 4 x 20mm explosive rounds entering one of its wing fuel tanks and failing to detonate which if they had would have shorn that wing clean off.
    When they returned to base and the engineers had taken care of the unexploded rounds the pilot saw one of the engineers coming towards him afterwards with a bit of wry smile, he handed him one of the projectiles and said look what we found inside one of the rounds handing him a piece of paper.

    "This is all we can do for now" so it became apparent that a slave labourer or a disgruntled Germanicon had deliberately not filled the rounds with explosive otherwise if they had that B-17 would have marked its demise by that all to familiar smoke trail going down.

    I have another good story about a long overdue P-38 Lightning that I will relate to the forum later in all honesty if it had not been witnessed by so many people at its home airfield one would consider it unbelievable.

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  9. #4
    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    The 20mm shell left a large dent in my Grandfather's van which remained until he sold it. When this attack started, on my Grandfather, he stopped the vehicle and got himself into the ditch at the side of the road; he noticed dirt flying up around him as machine gun rounds hit the ground.

  10. #5
    Legacy Member Brit plumber's Avatar
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    Please don't take this the wrong way and I'm far from an ammunition expert but your round looks like a Britishicon Hispano HEI round and not a Germanicon MG151 round. If I can locate my AP round it may confirm it.

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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brit plumber View Post
    your round looks like a Britishicon Hispano HEI
    Well...they all look pretty much the same. I have a Germanicon round for Hispano that looks like this.
    Regards, Jim

  12. #7
    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    It came to me via my father not directly from my Grandfather. I do also have a D.P./Dummy version which is dimensionally the same but the body is coloured yellow and the brass cap is made of solid aluminium and it also has some Germanicon writing on.

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  14. #8
    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    Sometimes German aircraft shot-down over the U.K. were found to have Britishicon made parts and equipment on-board. My Grandfather who was a member of the Home Guard and the Civil Defence was also an Electrical Engineer and would often attend the scene of German aircraft shot down and while doing so would take a personal/professional interest in the electrical equipment on board. On one such occasion he was examining some light fittings which I believe were in a wing of a shot down German aircraft (navigation lights?) and was surprised to find that the bulbs were made by Osram a British manufacturer. Perhaps these were supplied to Germanyicon pre-war or perhaps some were captured in Franceicon 1940, who knows???

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    Legacy Member TDH's Avatar
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    I was stationed at RAF Bentwaters/Woodbridge in East Anglia in '71 (the base that had the UFO's around '78 so they can't blame that one on me) and during my eight months there our EOD team defused at least one bomb a month some of them just on the other side of the fence where we were loading nukes. We also got tagged to dig up and remove the 50's from a P51 that crashed in 44. The pilot was still in it.. They knew where it was when it went down and never went after him because it buried in the med next to the river.

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