Artillery projectiles - do they have a brass casing?

Artillery projectiles - do they have a brass casing?

Author
Discussion

Rick_1138

Original Poster:

3,684 posts

179 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
quotequote all
One for the tread heads here, or any ex army folks smile

Basically I am doing a modelling diorama for a national competition and I am trying to find suitable items for the layout.

Basically it is an artillery piece that is supposed to have been abandoned with shells left lying, a last stand affair.

It is a sci-fi setting so the tank isn't real world applicable so I am having to find suitable modelling bits and bobs to use.

My initial idea was to use scale brass shell casings =, however finding suitable bits is difficult.

The main thing I am trying to find out is if modern artillery uses a metal shell casing, like a bullet) or if they use a shell, then powder put in separately like a ships gun?

Just curious as I want it to look right.

Thanks for any advice smile

Rick_1138

Original Poster:

3,684 posts

179 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
quotequote all
Cheers that's pretty handy smile

Seems some large artillery used a brass casing, some used bagless for the same calibre.

Thinking I may go for brass as the used tubes add's a level of desperation of just chucking them out to get the next one in.

The idea is based on the tank chassis the Germans dug into the road in berlin as a last stand artillery defence.

Rick_1138

Original Poster:

3,684 posts

179 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
quotequote all
rhinochopig said:
Sci-fi needs a rail-gun. You need a gen-set, big cables linking the two, and a stockpile of shells that look like these.

You'd think so, but this is warhammer 40,000 infantry, think WW1 on a continental battle scale, i.e. far future but old school mahoosive artillery, hence self propelled artillery in the style of German Flak 88's but 150mm calibre.

Having a hunt about, the german SDKFZ 'Hummel' is a real world counterpart to what I am doing.

Google Armageddon pattern basilisk and you will see what I am making.

Rick_1138

Original Poster:

3,684 posts

179 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
quotequote all
Foliage said:
The Hummel's gun uses seperate loading ammunition so that the charge can be adjusted. I cant find any pictures unfortunately.

Might be worth you giving this -http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/munitions/bullets2.htm a read
Sorry I meant the Hummel is the counterpart in style\look of the thing. Gun wise its a scaled up version of the flak 88 gun.

I ended up finding 105mm artillery ammunition in 1.35th scale that should be close enough to look right.

Interesting reading about modern ammo and armour piercing tungsten spike ammo!