Museum's inventory: Maxim MG with wrong stand. (new pics)

dauph197

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Hi Guys,

I will post many more pictures of the MG later but right now, I would like to know if the MG is lying on a wrong stand? For me, it does not work at all. Also, the stand has been modified with huge bolts and a modern cutter pin to hold the MG in place.

Quality picture is poor but I have to be quick if I want to finish the job once and for all... don't worry, I have plenty of pictures just for you CGN members! ;-)

Thanks.

Martin





 
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Sled mount!! That was the name I was looking for.

Yes, it is. It's written in German on the sled mount. I think, someone here was thinking ot was made for the Maxim and asked someone to find a way to put it on. We have only one MG 08/15 and it does not fit on the mount. Anyway, we do not have the pistol grip.

Martin
 
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OMG. A Maxim-Nordfelt with a brass water jacket. LOCK THE GATES as SMELLIE will be beating on them any time now.

BTW you should know that SMELLIE is one of the few experts on the MAXIM machine gun. He even got permission to visit the Pattern Room to study them. Some of his Maxim notes are now in the Smithsonian Institute.

If I get to visit the Citadelle, remind me to relate an amusing SMELLIE story that happened in the Pattern Room where he absolutely floored them with his knowledge and notes. Also, you should know that while he was there, there was no Instruction Manual for that Gun. Using his notes, SMELLIE sat down and wrote a complete operating Manual for it. It took him about five hours to do it.
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You have a British Maxim Nordenfelt on a German Maxim 08 sled mount...
P1040398_zps383e7ed3.jpg
 
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You have a British Maxim Nordenfelt on a German Maxim 08 sled mount...
P1040398_zps383e7ed3.jpg

So, at some point, this is an impossible marriage... ;-)

Thanks for the info and for the picture too.

I'm waiting for SMELLIE to knock on the front door. He'll be more than welcome to come and have a look to this Maxim!

Martin
 
Hmmm, your barrel finish is quite worn. Let me see what I have in "the shed"(tm).
Let me run the number as it MIGHT be one of the ones used by the NWMP in the Klondike.
It is a mixed bag of numbers but still a very rare and exotic piece here in Canada
 
Yes: an absolute work of art.

The first 100 Maxim Guns were in calibre .450 Gardner & Gatling (as were all 3 experimental guns) and were numbered from 1 through 100. The Pattern Room has Number 1 in totally-original condition and they have Number 100, which has all of the Service mods. They were built in 1891. These first guns were last used in 1915/16 during training of RFC gunners, at which time the entire remaining supply of .450GG ammunition was expended.

The Maxim-Nordenfeldt partnership did not last many years; it was history long before the Great War began.

The WEIGHT of the gun is marked on it because a part of the Specification was that the Gun should weigh no more than 60 pounds. This compared rather nicely with the 300 or so for the Gatling and the double rate of fire just put icing on the cake, so to speak.

Your LOCK (breech-block) has a B on it because each Gun was issued with a complete spares set. The Maxim Gun was of totally MODULAR CONSTRUCTION and was the FIRST industrial product to be so manufactured. Parts in the Spares kit were marked B. The drill was that if anything failed in the field, the Gun could be restored to firing condition in 1 minute or less, simply by changing-out the entire ASSEMBLY which had failed, for the corresponding B assembly. The failed assembly then would be rebuilt from the many parts in the Spares kit individually. If anything failed in the Firing Mechanism, you changed-out the LOCK for the B assembly. If anything failed in the FEED system, you changed-out the Feed Block for the B assembly..... and so forth.

Your FUSEE SPRING (in the Fusee Spring Box on the left side of the Gun) is not connected to the FUSEE on the left side of the CRANK. That is why the Crank Handle does not lie properly in Battery position. The Fusee Spring tension may be adjusted by using the scale on the outside of the Fusee Spring Box; this also adjusts the rate of fire somewhat. Properly adjusted, the Gun will fire 8 to 10 rounds per second and will do it by the hour.

The VICKERS Machine Gun is very much a product-improved Maxim Gun with the toggle inverted. Karl Heinemann came out with a similar redesign which was manufactured as the PARABELLUM from about 1915 through 1918.

VERY few of these guns survive. It would almost be worth the drive to Quebec City, just for the privilege of drooling at one!




@Wheaty: I have some interesting junk floating around here, but nothing in THAT league, I'm afraid!
 
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