File:QF13pounderShrapnelShell.jpg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Summary
Australian War Memorial Exhibit ID Number: REL31803
Title: 13 pounder Projectile with No 80/44 Time Fuze
Maker: Vickers Sons & Maxim Ltd
Place made: United Kingdom: England
Date made: c 1905
Physical Description: Quick Fire 13 Pounder artillery projectile with Number 80/44 fuze as used by the 13 Pounder Quick Fire Mark 1 Gun during the First World War. The body of the shell is made from forged steel and has been oil hardened and anealed. The shell is painted black and there is a copper driving band at the base of the projectile. There is a Number 80/40 Mark V/L time fuse screwed in to the head of the projectile. The fuze is made from brass and features a graduated time ring which has been damaged on one side. The projectile has been fired as the copper driving band has been engraved by barrel rifling. Markings - projectile - 13 PR; VMS; 649; BROAD ARROW MARK. Markings - fuze - no manufacturer marks visible; INCH DIVISIONS ON THE TIME RING.
Measurements: Diameter of projectile: 82 (mm); Length of projectile: 278 (mm); Weight of projectile: 5.9 (kg)
Licensing
- To illustrate the subject in question
- Where no free equivalent is available or could be created that would adequately give the same information
- On the English-language Wikipedia, hosted on servers in the United States by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation,
qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. Any other uses of this image, on Wikipedia or elsewhere, may be copyright infringement. See Wikipedia:Non-free content and Wikipedia:Copyrights.
Copyright: AWM copyright
Fair use rationale : Single use to illustrate the object in question - WWI Shrapnel shell for the 13 pdr gun. No equivalent free colour photograph being available. Version used here is of greatly diminished size and quality. Historically significant. This is an image of an exhibit held by a museum. Use of the image is not likely to replace the original market role of the original copyrighted media - the museum exhibit is the item of value, not its image.