Showing 494 items in the category Tools And Equipment with item type Weapon
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Port Fairy Historical Society Museum and Archives
Weapon - Sword and Scabard, late 1800s
Associated with Captain William Robertson, Captain of the S.S.Casino, Port Fairy Naval Reserve,Naval Dress Sword and scabard: Naval Dress Sword with brass handle with safety catch and gold thread tassle. Scabard of leather with brass decorationsSword and Crown E.R.VII- Owen Harries 15 Russell Street Landportlocal history, arms, edged weapons, captain william robertson, s.s.casino, port fairy naval reserve, belfast and koroit steam navigation co., boxer rebellion -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Weapon - WOODEN TRUNCHEON - LEAD FILLED POLICE BATON
BHS CollectionWooden Policeman's Truncheon with lead filled centre. Display notesgoldfields, enforcement, police, baton -
Montmorency–Eltham RSL Sub Branch
Weapon - German Bayonet, German WWI Bayonet
World War 1 German bayonet for the Model 1898 Mauser Rifle.Weyersberg Kirschbaum, 8C - IE Solingen -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
Weapon - Kukri Knife, Circa 2000s
Kukri knife as used by Ghurka soldiers in Burma. Curved steel blade with bone handle. Leather sheath with steel tip. Bone handle decorated with ivory dots and brass pins. Missing the two smaller knives.Blade adorned with intricate scroll and flower etching and the word INDIA . -
Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Weapon - Mortar, c1940
Mortar round used by the Imperial Japanese Army during WW2.Japanese Brown metal round in shape with pointed top features original paint with a yellow band on body and a red band at the top. ww2, wwii, world war two, second world war, japan, mortar, mortar shell, imperial japanese army -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
Weapon - Bayonet & Scabbard
The Pattern 1907 bayonet, officially called the Sword bayonet, pattern 1907 (Mark I), was a British bayonet designed to be used with the Short Magazine Lee Enfield (SMLE) rifle. The Pattern 1907 bayonet was used by the British and Commonwealth forces throughout both the First and Second World Wars. The Pattern 1907 bayonet consisted of a one-piece steel blade and tang, with a cross guard and pommel made from wrought iron or mild steel, and a grip usually of walnut secured to the tang by two screws. The entire bayonet was 21+3⁄4 inches (550 mm) long and weighed 16+1⁄2 ounces (470 g), although the weight of production models varied from 16 to 18 ounces (450 to 510 g). The Pattern 1907 bayonet's blade was 17 inches (430 mm) long. A shallow fuller was machined into both sides of the blade, 12 inches (300 mm) long and extending to within 3 inches (76 mm) of the tip, with variations due to the judgement of individual machinists.[2][3] The Pattern 1907 bayonet was supplied with a simple leather scabbard flitted with a steel top-mount and chape, and usually carried from the belt by a simple frog. The Pattern 1907 bayonet attached to the SMLE by a boss located below the barrel on the nose of the rifle and a mortise groove on the pommel of the bayonet.[2][4] The combined length of the SMLE and Pattern 1907 bayonet was 5 feet 2 inches (1.57 GR 1907 6.......'17 Wilkinson Stamped on right side of base of blade with various symbols on the left side. Hand carved on RHS Bakelite part of handle K ? (EFX) on LHS - MB -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Weapon, Ammunition
Black coloured card with various items attached. Displayed are several rounds used in various weapons, a splintex arrow and a lighter.5.56 - M 16 round armalite rifle - AK47 - 7.62 short 7.62 x 59 nugent armoured piercing ;splintex arrow (part of a cannister round ).50 cal machine gun round; 7.62 Nato round with M 60 machine gun link. Donated by John Spitzers. Ex I BN RAR SVN 1965 /66ammunition -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Weapon - Harpoon, n.d
Part of the collection purchased from Brendan Kurtze by the City of Portland in 1990sHarpoon, whaling implement, iron, painted gloss black, perhaps original head only, reconstructed shaft and handle sleeve, no handle. Completed replica obvious after removing paint. Gordon Stokes 22 September 1998.harpoon, whaling, maritime -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - SHRAPNEL
Item in the collection re Wing Commander Leonard Bacon OBE. Refer Cat No 7510.2 for his extensive service history.Dark brown piece of ragged steel shrapnel collected as souvenir from exploded munitions.shrapnel, souvenir -
Dandenong/Cranbourne RSL Sub Branch
Weapon - German Bayonet & Scabbard
Steel Bayonet with wood insert in handle and metal scabbard. WWI German.Bayonet at base of blade E@24 left hand side x/CSZ on left side- Z on hilt left side. Scabbard on belt clip E95 (crossed knifes0 then 50 tgf -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Weapon, 0.50 Calibre Ball - M33
Sectioned 0.50 Calibre bullett in clear resin displaybullet, m33 -
8th/13th Victorian Mounted Rifles Regimental Collection
Weapon - Sword
General display potentialBritish pattern 1897 Infantry officers sword, chromeplated and leather scabbard with steel endOn blade scroll work with Crown and Coat of Arms. Handguard Scroll with " GR "military, weapon, infantry, officer -
Greensborough Historical Society
Weapon - Machete cover, A. I. F, 1939c
Australian Army issue, probably for use in jungle warfareKhaki canvas sheath for machete, edges reinforced with binding, sewn and riveted, with belt strapmachete, australian army, world war ii -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - 38 MM SHELL, est 1940
Item souvenired by Donald Joseph Osborn NX56380, enlisted 29.7.40. He served in the 2/17th Australian Infantry Carrier Platoon 9th Div AIF. Served in the Seige of Tobruk, Tel El Eisa, El Alamein, Lae and Finschafen Campaigns. At discharge on 2.1.45 he was a Cpl in 3 Reinf's 2/17th Batt. .1) 38mm shell casing, engraved brass base. .2) Armour piercing projectile- anti-tank round.Faintly engraved "17th INF BATT/TOBRUK/July 20th/1941/AIF"arms-ammunition, military history, projectile -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Weapon - 1 bullet and shell casing
From Honeybun Collection1 bullet 1 casing -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - HEAVY FIELD HOWITZER, GERMAN, Rheinmetall Germany, 1918
This item is on display in the gardens of the Bendigo District RSL Sub Branch Havilah Road. Refer photo .1) for details re manufacture, history and use..1) Plaque metal black on a stand with white text re details of the item. .2) German heavy Field Howitzer short barrelled, Model year 1913, painted green, on two timber/metal wheels towed.brsl, smirsl, bdrslinc, german, field howitzer -
4th/19th Prince of Wales's Light Horse Regiment Unit History Room
Weapon - Bayonet, Bayonet and Scabbard Mk 1
Equipment used by the RegimentBayonet and scabbard MK1 for Owen Machine Carbine. 25 cm bladeX6A, 4, 45bayonet, owen -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Weapon - Carronade, 1840
The carronade was designed as a short-range naval weapon with a low muzzle velocity for merchant ships, but it also found a niche role on warships. It was produced by the Carron Iron Works and was at first sold as a complete system with the gun, mounting, and shot altogether. Carronades initially became popular on British merchant ships during the American Revolutionary War. A lightweight gun that needed only a small gun crew and was devastating at short range was well suited to defending merchant ships against French and American privateers. The invention of the cannon is variously attributed to Lieutenant General Robert Melville in 1759, or to Charles Gascoigne, manager of the Carron Company from 1769 to 1779. In its early years, the weapon was sometimes called a "mellvinade" or a "gasconade". The carronade can be seen as the culmination of a development of naval guns reducing the barrel length and thereby the gunpowder charge. The Carron Company was already selling a "new light-constructed" gun, two-thirds of the weight of the standard naval gun and charged with one-sixth of the weight of the ball in powder before it introduced the carronade, which further halved the gunpowder charge. The theory of its design was to use less powder and had other advantages that were advertised in the company's sales pamphlet of the time, state. The smaller gunpowder charge reduced the barrel heating in action, also reduced the recoil. The mounting, attached to the side of the ship on a pivot, took the recoil on a slider, without altering the alignment of the gun. The pamphlet advocated the use of woollen cartridges, which eliminated the need for wadding and worming, although they were more expensive. Carronades also simplified gunnery for comparatively untrained merchant seamen in both aiming and reloading that was part of the rationale for adopting the gun. Other advantages promoted by the company were. The replacement of trunnions by a bolt underneath, to connect the gun to the mounting, reduced the width of the carriage that enhanced the wide angle of fire. A merchant ship would almost always be running away from an enemy, so a wide-angle of fire was much more important than on a warship. A carronade weighed a quarter as much as a standard cannon and used a quarter to a third of the gunpowder charge. This reduced charge allowed Carronades to have a shorter length and much lighter weight than long guns. Increasing the size of the bore and ball reduces the required length of the barrel. The force acting on the ball is proportional to the square of the diameter, while the mass of the ball rises by the cube, so acceleration is slower; thus, the barrel can be shorter and therefore lighter. Long guns were also much heavier than Carronades because they were over-specified to be capable of being double-shotted, (to load cannons with twice the shot, for increased damage at the expense of range), whereas it was dangerous to do this in a carronade. A ship could carry more carronades, or carronades of a larger calibre, than long guns, and carronades could be mounted on the upper decks, where heavy long guns could cause the ship to be top-heavy and unstable. Carronades also required a smaller gun crew, which was very important for merchant ships, and they were faster to reload. The small bore carronade and carriage is part of a collection of nineteenth Century Flagstaff Hill Guns and Cannon, which is classified as being of significance and was made a few years after the beginning of Queen Victoria's reign in 1837 and fires a 6 lb pound cannon ball. This nineteenth century artillery piece is a rare and representative item of artillery of this era, used predominately on ships, both military and merchant. The artillery piece, individually and as part of the collection, is highly significant for its historical, scientific and aesthetic reasons at the state, national and world level. This carronade represents the methods of artillery technology, its advancement and its modifications to suit dangerous situations that sailors encountered from attacks from free booters (pirates, living from plunder) or others at the time. Carronade firing a 6 lb cast iron ball, with a smooth bore barrel 6.5 cm in dia the item is mounted on stepped wooden carriage with wooden wheels. Cannon barrel can have its elevation adjusted via a wooden wedge. Gun carriage has loops for locating and holding in position to a deck by ropes. Carriage is a replica made 1982Cast into the barrel is the royal emblem of Queen Victoria (VR "Victoria Regina") indicating the carronade was cast during Queen Victoria's reign / 1840 & 4-2-0 denoting the weight of the barrel. Right hand trunnion has a serial number “8708”. Also on top of the barrel is the British "Board of Ordinance" identifying mark a broad arrow indicating the carronade was in military use. flagstaff hill, warrnambool, shipwrecked coast, flagstaff hill maritime museum, maritime museum, shipwreck coast, flagstaff hill maritime village, great ocean road, colonial defences, victoria’s coastal defences, warrnambool fortification, warrnambool garrison battery, warrnambool volunteer corps, ordinance, armaments, garrison gun, smooth bore cannon, carronade, black powder, 12 pounder, 1840, artillery, lieutenant general robert melville, charles gascoigne, carron company, mellvinade, gasconade -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Weapon, 60mm Mortar, 1960's
The Chinese type 31 60mm Mortar is a copy of the US M2 Mortar. The mortar consists of a barrel, bipod and baseplate. The barrel is made from ordnance steel and has a smoothbore profile. the breech end has a ball and socket arrangement that fits into the baseplate. The tripod is adjustable for traverse and elevation and can be folded for transportation purposes and is fitted with a leather binding strap. The baseplate is square in profile and is made from pressed metal. A canvas carry strap is fitted through two loops in the top surface. There are anchor spikes at the bottom of the baseplate. The mortar is painted camouflage in black, brown and olive drab.INNOC. Serial numbers : Base Plate 9307 330937; Bipod 9364south east asia, vietnam, vietcong, weapon -
8th/13th Victorian Mounted Rifles Regimental Collection
Weapon
Type and country of origin still being researchedBayonet, double edged, with quillion and wooden handle.bayonet, wwi -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - ARTILLERY FUSE, C.WW2
Brass Artillery shell fuse that has been fired.Base markings NO II ME 4/11 16 VF 8/40arms - ammunition, military history, weapon accessories, artillery fuse -
Warrnambool and District Historical Society Inc.
Weapon - Artefact, Cannon ball, pre 1830
This cannon ball formed the basis of a discussion with artillerist Peter Webster and historical society members in 2011. The following ideas were put forward. It was approximately 5 inches in diameter and weighed 10lb, Such cannon balls were used in an 18 calibre cannon, which were used only on ships. (12 calibre guns were field artillery). Australia was behind England in its artillery use and used hand me downs. In the 1800's Australia did an audit of artillery and cleared out those no longer in use. By the time of the 1830's 18lb cannons were largely obsolete and removed from service Australia used 18 calibre cannons in Northern Australia at Port Essington and Fort Dundas (Melville Island) Perhaps this cannon ball has no real connection with Australia and came as ballast from some other country.This is one of the more interesting items in our collection and there has been much conjecture over the years as to the story of how it ended up in Warrnambool. In that way it has built its own mystery and provenanceRound metal ball measuring 5 inches in diameter, weighing 10lb. The surface is pitted with the original surface visible in some parts.defence, war, ships, cannon ball, exploration, warrnambool, warrnambool history, warrnambool cannonball -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - ARTILLERY SHELL & PROJECTILE, 1917
.1) Brass cannon shell. calibre 37 mm with projectile shell - brass - inert .2) Projectile - steel with four copper driving bands, not fired - nose cap - hollow brass threaded base.Shell - base "37 - 85 pdps 73 .9.17", Projectile - "IF (not legible)", Nose cap - "39817"passchendaele barracks trust, weapon, projectile, casing -
Ringwood RSL Sub-Branch
Weapon - Edged Weapon Cutlass Bayonet, Cutlass, C 1871
Pattern 1871 Cutlass Bayonet to fit a Martini Rifle -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Weapon - Harpoon, n.d
Iron whaling harpoon, arrow-shaped head 'LONDON' stamped into one side, 'OORRAR' on reverse'LONDON' stamped into one side, 'OORRAR' on reversewhaling, portland industry, weapon, harpoon -
Bendigo Historical Society Inc.
Weapon - Artillery Shell
Brown metal cylindrical shaped object coming to a point at the end. 13cm in length. Hollow bottom with a thread going up 2.5cm. 3 bands on the bottom area then a smaller band and two grooves further on the item. weapons, artillery shell -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Weapon, Claymore Mine, The Box, MK2
Perspex display featuring sequential firing device for Claymores. The Box Mk2 with green plastic claymore case and photos of Lt. Moose Dunlop and Pte. Lyal Mitchell. An explanation of features and use are also included.claymore mine, lt. moose dunlop, private lyal mitchell -
Bendigo Military Museum
Weapon - TANK, CENTURION, C.1952
This item is on display in the gardens of the Bendigo District RSL Sub Branch Havilah Road. Refer photo .1) for details re manufacture, history and use..1) Plaque metal black on a stand with details re the item. .2) Centurion Main Battle Tank Model Mark 5/1, complete with motor, painted green colour, tracked vehicle.brsl, smirsl, bdrslinc, tank, centurion -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Weapon, Fuse
An open M605 Fuse (Sectionalised) The item is multicoloured - Red, Blue, Green, Yellow.fuse /detonator. -
Australian Commando Association - Victoria
Weapon - Dyak Dart Quiver - 2 pieces