Jam Tin Grenade

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Double-Cylinder Grenade
Type Hand grenade
Place of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1915 -
Production history
Variants No 8 'Light', No 9 'Heavy'
Specifications
Filling Ammonal + Steel fragments
Detonation
mechanism
Timed Friction Fuse

The Double Cylinder, No 8 and No 9 hand grenades were early designs used by the British in World War I.

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[edit] Overview

The Jam-Tin (or Double Cylinder) was one of the many grenades designed for British use in the early part of the First World War in response to the failings of the No 1 grenade.

The grenade was an inner can of explosive with an outer can of metal fragments or ball bearings. The heavy pattern No 9 grenade contained more HE and more shrapnel.

The fuse was ignited by a friction device or a cigarette.

Initially when demand for grenades was at its greatest, engineers were encouraged to improvise their own grenades from the tins containing the soldier's ration of jam, hence the name. Incidents with the improvised form and the supply of superior grenades led to official withdrawal of the design.

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British Grenades of World War I & World War II
Anti-personnel
Grenade, No 1 Hales | No.s 5, 23, 36 Mills | No. 69 | No.s 8, 9 Double Cylinder Jam Tin
Anti-tank
No. 68 AT (Rifle) | No. 73 Thermos | No. 74 Sticky bomb | No. 75 AT Hawkins |
Special Types
No. 82 Gammon | No. 76 (WP) | No. 77 (WP) | "Lewes bomb"
British Empire weapons of the First World War