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A Mountain artillery unit with a 65/17 modello 13 gun on Monte Padon firing at Austrian positions on the Sass di Mezdi German Datasheet. The 65 mm gun was first accepted into service with Italian mountain troops in 1913, and it served with them throughout World War I. It was used in the Fiat 2000 heavy tank which saw action in Libya ...
5"/31 caliber gun United States: 1889-1910 127 mm (5.0 in) 5"/38 caliber gun United States: 1930s - World War II - Cold War 127 mm (5.0 in) 5"/40 caliber gun United States: Spanish–American War - World War I 127 mm (5.0 in) 5"/50 caliber gun United States: World War I - World War II 127 mm (5.0 in) 5"/51 caliber gun United States
The Canon de 65 mm Modèle 1891 & Modèle 1902 were a family of widely used naval guns of the French Navy that were also used by the Ottoman Navy during World War I. Guns removed from decommissioned ships also saw use as coastal artillery and as fortress guns in the Maginot Line fortifications during World War II .
The 100 mm (3.9 in) L/65 caliber Type 98 gun utilized a horizontal sliding breech, in addition to either monobloc (made from a single forging) or replaceable liner construction of the barrel. The gun featured a spring-powered rammer that was cocked by means of the recoil of the gun being fired; this allowed the rammer to load the gun at any ...
RI Gen. Stat. 11–47–58: Castle Doctrine Law? Yes: Yes: RI Gen. Stat. 11–8–8: No duty to retreat while in one's home NFA weapons restricted? Yes: Yes: RI Gen. Stat. 11–47–8 RI Gen. Stat. 11–47–20: It is a violation of state law to possess any NFA weapon or silencers with the exception of Class III FFLs. Peaceable Journey laws? No ...
A surviving 20/65 Breda. The Breda 20/65 mod.35 ("Breda 20 mm L/65 model 1935"), [2] [3] also simply known as 20 mm Breda [4] or Breda Model 35, [5] among other variations, [3] was an Italian 20 mm (0.787 in) anti-aircraft gun produced by the Società Italiana Ernesto Breda of Brescia company during the 1930s and early 1940s.
However, due to a miscommunication between the two Navy departments involved in the design, the ships required a lighter gun than the Mark 2/Mark 3, resulting, ultimately, in the design of the 267,900 lb (121,500 kg) 16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun. In January 1941 all but three of the remaining fifty Mark 2 and Mark 3 guns were released to the Army.
The model was reissued in 2005 and again in 2017 as the Chronoris Date, with the Oris automatic caliber 733, based on the Sellita SW 200-1. [51] Oris Worldtimer (1997) -- incorporated a multi time zone complication, using pushers at both 4 and 8:00 to respectively advance or decrease the main hour hand (local time) by an hour with each click. [52]