Bombs Color
Bombs Color
Hello everybody;
I tried to find on all the 3ds but without success...
how are the colors of the bombs external ? in some picture I found a dark green ( more olive green) but I am not sure if is real.
In particular external charges from 1935 until 1940..
I am building now a CANT Z 501 Italeri 1/72 Gabbiano which has 2 500kg bomb underwings; maybe these are different colors becuase the Idro planes?
Anyone can help me?
tnx
RiK
I tried to find on all the 3ds but without success...
how are the colors of the bombs external ? in some picture I found a dark green ( more olive green) but I am not sure if is real.
In particular external charges from 1935 until 1940..
I am building now a CANT Z 501 Italeri 1/72 Gabbiano which has 2 500kg bomb underwings; maybe these are different colors becuase the Idro planes?
Anyone can help me?
tnx
RiK
Ardisco, Colpisco E men'infischio!
Hi RiK,
I am not sure this could help you with the quite specific timeframe you are referring to, but you may find interesting checking out
<a href="http://www.biografiadiunabomba.it/resid ... aereo.html"> this page</a>. It is from the website of an Italian EOD operator and contains some info pages about air-dropped ordnance of Regia Aeronautica. (Unfortunately, the source where the pages were scanned from is not stated.)
According to this reference, the most frequent combination is grey body and red point tip.
Try also <a href="http://miles.forumcommunity.net/?t=10832398"> this discussion</a> from an Italian Militaria forum, with colour photographs of a light blue bomb tail, recovered form its use as … flowerpot stand. It is discussed how colour details depended upon the explosive charge (light blue was for Amatol).
Hope this helps a little.
Mauro
I am not sure this could help you with the quite specific timeframe you are referring to, but you may find interesting checking out
<a href="http://www.biografiadiunabomba.it/resid ... aereo.html"> this page</a>. It is from the website of an Italian EOD operator and contains some info pages about air-dropped ordnance of Regia Aeronautica. (Unfortunately, the source where the pages were scanned from is not stated.)
According to this reference, the most frequent combination is grey body and red point tip.
Try also <a href="http://miles.forumcommunity.net/?t=10832398"> this discussion</a> from an Italian Militaria forum, with colour photographs of a light blue bomb tail, recovered form its use as … flowerpot stand. It is discussed how colour details depended upon the explosive charge (light blue was for Amatol).
Hope this helps a little.
Mauro
Just found on the Net: http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/ref ... -Italy.pdf
(Italian and French WW2 Explosive Ordnance Technical Manual by the US Departments of Army and Air Force)
~
(Italian and French WW2 Explosive Ordnance Technical Manual by the US Departments of Army and Air Force)
~
-
- Generale di Brigata Aerea
- Posts: 170
- Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 2:40 pm
- Location: Padua, Italy
Bombs in the kit are a couple of 250 kgs ordnance. Actually, they were seldom used by Z.501s, as the standard load was a couple of 160 kgs anti-submarine bombs. Pictures are from the manual indicated by MauroG:
Nose fuse had four-blades steel vanes, tail fuse had three-blades brass vanes.
There were various shades of grey, as it wasn't a standard colour, nor had a camo purpose, but it was just an anti-corrosive industrial paint. Sometimes, the bomb body, the tail or both were blue (same meaning as above) like current gas bottles.
Stefano
Nose fuse had four-blades steel vanes, tail fuse had three-blades brass vanes.
There were various shades of grey, as it wasn't a standard colour, nor had a camo purpose, but it was just an anti-corrosive industrial paint. Sometimes, the bomb body, the tail or both were blue (same meaning as above) like current gas bottles.
Stefano
- stefanuccio
- Generale di Brigata Aerea
- Posts: 187
- Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 6:19 pm
- Location: cape town south africa
- stefanuccio
- Generale di Brigata Aerea
- Posts: 187
- Joined: Sat May 02, 2009 6:19 pm
- Location: cape town south africa
Hi again,
I have flipped through my references these days and I have found a couple of articles on this subject by Nicola Malizia published on Storia Militare (http://www.storiamilitare-aes.com/):
L'armamento dei velivoli della Regia Aeronautica (bombe ordinarie), issue 42 March 1997
Le bombe speciali della Regia Aeronautica, issue 44 May 1997
(Unfortunately, I see that these ones are no longer in the list of back issues available from the publisher. If you are interested, keep an eye out to stands at model shows and fairs when past issues of several magazines pop out occasionally at bargain price.)
Here Malizia provides more details and lists the ordnance types by the official designation. He explains also that existed two versions of the 100kg and 500kg class bombs, mina (designation letter M) and torpedine (designation letter T), hence the “100-M” and “100-T” labels. The torpedine contained about as twice as explosive in weight than the mina. Both versions had light grey body, with the M having a red tip and the T a light blue one.
It looks like that only the T version existed for 50kg, 250kg and 800kg weapons.
As far as idroplanes are concerned, Malizia explains how they could carry normal ordnance but often used the 160CS bombs for antisom activity and 160T for attacking harbour infrastructures and facilities.
Ciao
Mauro
I have flipped through my references these days and I have found a couple of articles on this subject by Nicola Malizia published on Storia Militare (http://www.storiamilitare-aes.com/):
L'armamento dei velivoli della Regia Aeronautica (bombe ordinarie), issue 42 March 1997
Le bombe speciali della Regia Aeronautica, issue 44 May 1997
(Unfortunately, I see that these ones are no longer in the list of back issues available from the publisher. If you are interested, keep an eye out to stands at model shows and fairs when past issues of several magazines pop out occasionally at bargain price.)
Here Malizia provides more details and lists the ordnance types by the official designation. He explains also that existed two versions of the 100kg and 500kg class bombs, mina (designation letter M) and torpedine (designation letter T), hence the “100-M” and “100-T” labels. The torpedine contained about as twice as explosive in weight than the mina. Both versions had light grey body, with the M having a red tip and the T a light blue one.
It looks like that only the T version existed for 50kg, 250kg and 800kg weapons.
As far as idroplanes are concerned, Malizia explains how they could carry normal ordnance but often used the 160CS bombs for antisom activity and 160T for attacking harbour infrastructures and facilities.
Ciao
Mauro
Storia Militare Reference
Hello RiK,
I can provide you a copy of the Storia Militare Magazine Article "L'armamento dei velivoli della Regia Aeronautica (bombe ordinarie)", issue 42 March 1997. If you would send me your E-mail adress, I'll make a pdf-file for you...
Best regards,
Ulrich
I can provide you a copy of the Storia Militare Magazine Article "L'armamento dei velivoli della Regia Aeronautica (bombe ordinarie)", issue 42 March 1997. If you would send me your E-mail adress, I'll make a pdf-file for you...
Best regards,
Ulrich
I stumbled upon this British declassified document on the subject: Italian Bombs and Fuzes (scroll down to the cover image for downloading). It was written for the Royal Engineers EOD service and contains many accurate drawings as well as detailed info on the topic. In some respects it looks more accurate than the US Technical Manual reported in previous posts.
Very worth downloading and perusal.
Mauro
Very worth downloading and perusal.
Mauro
- davenport49
- Generale di Brigata Aerea
- Posts: 266
- Joined: Mon Aug 03, 2020 9:15 am
- Location: Michigan
Re: Bombs Color
Looking to paint 500Kg GP bombs; references seem conflicting - U.S. tech manual says overall grey with red nose (how much of the nose?); British tech manual says dull blue with 4" red stripe around the nose. can anyone sort this out?
Re: Bombs Color
Here are a collection of 50kg, 250kg and 500kg bombs. The last two photos you can see the extent of the colored bomb heads. Bombs with colored bands were used for training. Stefano might have more to add here.