No 1 Grenade
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No 1 Grenade | |
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Type | Hand grenade |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
Used by | United Kingdom |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Variants | Mk. 1, Mk. 2 |
Specifications | |
Detonation mechanism |
Percussion fuse (ie. impact detonated) |
The Grenade, Hand No 1 was the first British hand grenade used in World War I.
[edit] Overview
The Grenade No 1 was taken from the designs of Hales.
The grenade proper was a can of explosive material with an iron fragmentation band. The fuse was of the impact sort, detonating when the top of the grenade hit the ground. A long cane handle ( approx 16 inches) allowed the user to throw the grenade further than the blast of the explosion.
To ensure that the grenade hit the ground nose first, a cloth streamer was attached to the end of the handle. When thrown this unfurled and acted as a tail to stabilize flight.
When the battlefield became confined to the trenches, the long handle became a liability - several accidents occurred when reaching back for the throw, the fuse struck the trench side. The handle was then shortened to a safer 8 inches as the Mk II.
The No 1 grenade was followed by No 2, 3 and 4 all based on the same pattern. Thereafter the compact No 5 grenade or Mills bomb came into use.
The grenade came with a metal loop so it could hang from the belt.
[edit] See also
British Grenades of World War I & World War II |
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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" |