database for skalabyggesett | samlingsverktøy
MasterGunner
Rick Taylor (MasterGunner)
US

75mm Gun Model of 1917 (British)
US Artillery in the Great War

Skala:
1:35
Status:
Fullført
Påbegynt:
January 5, 2021
Fullført:
April 1, 2021
Tid brukt:
97 hours

When the US entered World War 1, it lacked a modern artillery park. It was decided to utilize the French 75mm for its divisional field gun. This allowed the US to leverage the robust French ammunition supply chain. However, the US struggled to get the French 75 into production and its own design for the Model 1916 75mm gun floundered. However, Bethlehem Steel had been producing the 18 pounder gun for the British and it was a simple matter to adapt that design to fire the French 75 ammo and make a number of changes to suit American tastes. 126 of these guns were shipped to France and issued however the armistice was signed before they saw action.

I converted a Resicast 18 pounder and limber for this project. I had to shorten the barrel, shorten the recuperator and convert it to the Mk 1 version, reshape the breach ring, build all new straight shields, build new shield mounts, create storage boxes for the inside of the shield, and modify the sights. The limber also required modification: I sawed off the top row of shells in the ammo box, built new lid, apron, and top, added the center drawers, and added US pioneer tools, lantern, and footman loops.

It was quite a bit of work for a very small gun; but, it was worth it to add this weapon to my display case.

Prosjektinnhold

Byggesett
35.1237
WWI 18pdr Gun, limber & wagon
Resicast 1:35
35.1237 2014 New tool Flertema (2)
/no/search.php?q=*&fkMATEID[]=32506&showast=no&fkWORKBENCH[]=WB32506&page=projects&project=97339
 
 

Fotoalbum

6 bilder
75mm Gun Model 1917 - AEFView album, image #3
1:35
1:35 WWI 18pdr Gun, limber & wagon (Resicast 35.1237)

Del av min Samling

US Artillery in WW1
Fullført 10×

Kommentarer

3 3 April 2021, 23:23

We use cookies for a great and free experience. By continuing to browse the site you agree to our use of cookies.

Essential cookies are for: preferences, security, performance analytics and contextual advertising.

Privacy policy »   Continue