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Cannon Ammunition 13 - 20 mm

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INERT DEACTIVATED. German, WW2, 1939 Dated, 20mm Soluthern (20x138B) (Flak 30 & 38) Wooden Bulleted Blank Round. - O 1986
INERT DEACTIVATED. This a rare wooden bulleted blank round for the German 2cm Flak 30 and 38 anti-aircraft guns. Although these guns were originally used as anti-aircraft guns, they could be used to great effect in close support ground fire. The wooden projectile enabled the gun to feed and fire blank rounds in the fully automatic mode. This wooden bulleted round has an early copper washed steel case that retains all of its original copper finish. The cartridge has a lightly knurled ring 40mm above the base of the cartridge case denoting a blank round. The round is headstamped P490 (Hugo Schneider A.G., Werk Altenburg) 39 (1939 date) 201 XW Waffenampt 20. The hollow wooden bullet appears to be made of beech and has the profile of the armour piercing projectile. See Hogg, German artillery of World War Two, pages 144 – 148. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to retain this inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1986
£195.00

DEACTIVATED INERT. MINT, Czech, 30 x 210 Target Practice/Tracer (TP/T) Round For The M53/59 Praga Anti-Aircraft Gun. Sn - 20842
DEACTIVATED INERT. This is a mint Czech 30mm (30x210) target practice/tracer (TP/T) round for the M53/59 Praga anti-aircraft gun that was developed in the late 1950s and consists of a heavily modified Praga 6 wheeled drive truck chassis that was armed with a twin barrelled 30mm automatic gun mounted on the rear of the chassis. The gun was optically sighted so it could only be used in good conditions in daylight. Although the gun is obsolete in the anti-aircraft role it is still used as a ground support weapon against unarmoured or lightly armoured targets. This target practice round consists of a grey anodised steel cartridge case fitted with a steel screw in percussion primer. The cartridge case is headstamped 20 32 over 63 aym over UTK and crossed swords 63. The cartridge case is crimped to a steel iron driving banded projectile with a single row of 6 stab crimps. The projectiles nose fuse is replicated by an inert steel one. The projectile retains all of its original grey painted finish with a 5mm wide band above the driving band and is stencilled round the circumference in black 502-90. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to possess inert ammunition in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. Sn 20842
£275.00

INERT DEACTIVATED. This is a WW2, 1943 Dated, Unfired American Oerlikon 20MM/70 Mark III, (20x110RB) Anti-Aircraft Gun H.E. (High Explosive) Drill Round. - O 1983
This is a WW2, 1943 dated American made Oerlikon 20mm/70 mark III anti-aircraft gun H.E. (High Explosive) drill round. the guns were first made by Oerlikon, a Swiss company in 1937 and ordered mainly by the Royal Navy. During WW2, the Oerlikon gun was swiftly adopted as a short range anti-aircraft gun that swiftly replaced the .5 inch Browning and .9 anti-aircraft guns. The gun was of a simple blowback design fed by a 60 round magazine with a high rate of fire of approximately 500 rounds per minute. These American made rounds were used by both the American and Royal Navies. This is an American made 20mm Oerlikon Mark 2 drill round which consists of a brass cartridge case with three 8mm holes round its circumference and is headstamped with the letter C in a lozenge, 1943 (date) and 20MM MK11. The round is fitted with a brass driving banded high explosive projectile with a brass nose fuze which is stamped round its circumference MK 26 –NC and is held into the projectile by 3 stab crimps. The round is fitted with an uncrimped brass percussion primer. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to retain this inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1983
£125.00

INERT DEACTIVATED. This is a WW2, 1943 Dated, Unfired American Oerlikon 20MM/70 Mark II, (20x110RB) Anti-Aircraft Gun H.E. (High Explosive) Drill Round. - O 1982
This is a WW2, 1943 dated American made Oerlikon 20mm/70 mark II anti-aircraft gun H.E. (High Explosive) drill round. the guns were first made by Oerlikon, a Swiss company in 1937 and ordered mainly by the Royal Navy. During WW2, the Oerlikon gun was swiftly adopted as a short range anti-aircraft gun that swiftly replaced the .5 inch Browning and .9 anti-aircraft guns. The gun was of a simple blowback design fed by a 60 round magazine with a high rate of fire of approximately 500 rounds per minute. These American made rounds were used by both the American and Royal Navies. This is an American made 20mm Oerlikon Mark 2 drill round which consists of a brass cartridge case with three 8mm holes round its circumference and is headstamped with the letter C in a lozenge, 1943 (date) and 20MM MK11/ the round is fitted with a copper driving banded steel high explosive projectile with a brass nose fuze which is stamped round its circumference MKXXVI MOD…MBCo LOT. The fuze has two flats at the top to tighten it onto the projectile. The base of the cartridge has an empty Berdan primer pocket. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to retain this inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1982
£125.00

DEACTIVATED INERT .55 Boys (14x99B) Mark 2 Armour Piercing Anti-Tank Rifle, 5 Rounds In Stripper Clip. - O 1974
DEACTIVATED INERT. This round was developed by a Captain H C Boys, a designer at the Royal Small Arms Factory, Enfield resulting in the .55 Boys anti-tank rifle being adopted in 1937. Although the round was adequate against light tanks in the early part of the war, the Boys was ineffective against heavier armour and was phased out in favour of the PIAT mid-war. The Boys anti-tank rifle was a bolt action rifle fed from a five-shot magazine, loaded by means of a 5 round stripper clip. The rifle was large, heavy with a bipod at the front and a separate grip below the padded butt. These are mark 2 armour piercing rounds in its stripper clip. The rounds are headstamped K43 W11 (Kynoch 1943, mark 2 armour piercing) on the brass cartridge case. The brass 5 round stripper clip is stamped MUI I 1942 (MUI the manufacturer, a mark 1 clip made in 1942). The Nickel cased bullet is held by 3 stab crimps at the case mouth. The armour piercing bullets have had a cut across the base of the bullet casing and the hardened steel core to destabilise them if ever they were fired so they are collectable without a licence. This deactivation cannot be seen when the bulleted round is displayed. The price includes UK delivery sand no licence is required to possess these inert rounds in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1974
£225.00

INERT DEACTIVATED. British, 1943 Dated, 20mm Hispano-Suiza (20x110) HS 404 Aircraft Cannon Ball Round By Greenwood & Batley. - O 1964
INERT DEACTIVATED. The HS.404 cannon was originally designed and produced by Spanish/French company Hispano-Suiza in the mid-1930s. The guns was also referred to as Birkigt type 404, after its designer Marc Birkigt and later versions based on British development are known as 20 mm Hispano. In 1938, an aircraft based version of the HS.404 was produced at the request of the French government which was installed on a wide range of pre-war French fighter aircraft, notably in installations firing through the propeller shaft of the Hispano-Suiza 12Y engine fitted to some early French Air Force aircraft. The HS.404 was fed by drum magazines which held 60 rounds of ammunition. Later on in 1940, the HS404 cannon was adopted by the Royal Air Force and entered service arming the Bristol Beaufighter and the Westland Whirlwind which carried 4 of the guns internally. The gun was also used in Spitfires in the Battle of Britain. The gun however with its original 60 round drum feed although very effective in combat was mechanically unreliable. The gun was later modified to a belt feed which was reliable and served in many aircraft throughout WW2 including the Supermarine Spitfire, Hawker Hurricane, Westland Whirlwind, Bristol Beaufighter, Hawker Typhoon and Tempest as standard equipment or an upgrade of the Browning .303 machine gun as an effective hard hitting gun. The round was later used in the De Havilland Vampire and Gloster Meteor fighter aircraft World War 2 and after. This 20mm HS 404 ball round is headstamped GB (Greenwood & Batley, Leeds) 20MM 43 (1943 date). The steel ball projectile retains much of its original painted black finish and is fitted with a copper driving band and is retained by 4 stab crimps at the case mouth. The base of the projectile is stamped RCC. The unstruck brass percussion primer is retained in the brass cartridge case by a circular ring crimp. The price U.K. delivery and no licence is required to possess inert rounds in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1964
£125.00

INERT. Swiss KAD, HS820A 20mm (20 x 139) Cannon DRILL Round. - O 1950
INERT. This is a Swiss made 20mm (20 x 139) KAD (HS820A) cannon DRILL round for the Rheinmatall Mk20 Rh-202 auto canon that was designed by Rheinmetall from the Hispano-Sueza Hs 820 and Hs 820A. The cannon is used on German military vehicles, including the Marder infantry fighting vehicle, the Spähpanzer Luchs and some variants of the Wiesel AWC. It is also used in the Argentinian VCTP, an IFV based on the TAM chassis. This gun fires the 20×139mm ammunition originally developed for the Hispano-Suiza HS.820. A towed twin mount antiaircraft version was produced and used by Argentina in the Falklands War. This round was made by Oerlikon in 1980 and consists of a grey lacquered steel cartridge case which is headstamped HS 10 DN OE (Oerlikon) 80 (1980 date). The round is fitted with a brass screw in percussion primer which is stamped DN-03. The steel projectile has a iron driving band and retains most of its original blue painted finish (signifying an inert practice projectile) and is stencilled in white round its circumference DP (Drill Practice) ?68M 48. See page 46-47, Janes Ammunition Handbook, 1st Edition 1993 – 4. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to possess his inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1950
£125.00

DEACTIVATED INERT. WW2, 1943 Dated, Unfired Italian 20mm Breda 35 and Scotti gun (20x138B) Armour Piercing (AP) Round. - O 1948
DEACTIVATED INERT. This a WW2, 1943 dated, unfired, Italian 20mm armour piercing (AP) round for the Breda 35 and Scotti-Isotta Fraschini 20/70 automatic anti-aircraft and ground guns. The Breda was also used in a twin mount in Italian naval vessels. This armour piercing round is headstamped BPD26 (Bombrini Parodi Delfino, Rome, Italy) 2-43 (February 1943 date) 9G C. the steel primer is held in by 4 stab crimps. The steel projectile is fitted with a copper driving band and is held in the cartridge case by three stab crimps. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to possess inert rounds in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1948
£195.00

INERT DEACTIVATED. German, WW2, 1945 Dated, 20mm Soluthern (20x138B) (Flak 30 & 38) High Explosive/Trace (HE/T) Round. - O 1937
INERT DEACTIVATED. This is an unfired 1945 dated, WW2 German 20mm High Explosive/Trace (HE/T) round for the German 2cm Flak 30 and 38 anti-aircraft guns. Although these guns were originally used as anti-aircraft guns, they could be used to great effect in close support ground fire. The round has a brown lacquered steel percussion primed cartridge case. The brass percussion primer is unfired and has a red annulus. The round is headstamped eey (Metallwarenfabrik Treuenbrietzen GmbH, Roederhof plant) 45 (1945 date) 239 W and a waffenampt. The high explosive tracer projectile retains much of its original yellow painted finish with a 6mm wide red band above the copper driving band signifying a tracer round. The projectile is stencilled in red round its circumference ?? 13 . The projectile is fitted with an alloy AZ49 nose fuse which is stamped rund its circumference AZ49 wa (Hasag, Hugo Schneider AG, Abteilung Lampenfabrik, Leipzig) 43 11 99 A10 . See Hogg, German artillery of World War Two, pages 144 – 148. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to retain this inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1937
£195.00

INERT DEACTIVATED. German, WW2, 1938 Dated, 20mm Soluthern (20x138B) (Flak 30 & 38) High Explosive (HE) Practice Round. - O 1936
INERT DEACTIVATED. This is an unfired 1938 dated, WW2 German 20mm High Explosive (HE) practice round for the German 2cm Flak 30 and 38 anti-aircraft guns. Although these guns were originally used as anti-aircraft guns, they could be used to great effect in close support ground fire. The round has a brass percussion primed cartridge case and is headstamped P198 (Metallwarenfabrik Treuenbritzen. Belsig) 38 (1938 date) 1.3g and waffenampt 369 and an inverted triangle. The high explosive projectile retains much of its original green painted finish and is stencilled in black round its circumference P181 (Schneider AG, Alcenburg) . 8 115g. The projectile is fitted with an alloy dummy practice fuse distinguished by three arrows pointing towards the nose of the fuse. The nose fuse is stamped round its circumference Ersst f AZ 5045 RhS 181 . See Hogg, German artillery of World War Two, pages 144 – 148. The price includes UK delivery and no licence is required to retain this inert round in the UK if retained as part of a collection or display. O 1936
£225.00
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