Mills bomb

Mills bomb

Mills bomb 36M, dating from 1942
Type Hand grenade
Place of origin  United Kingdom
Service history
In service May, 1915–1970s
Production history
Designed 1915
Number built 70 million +
Variants No. 5, No. 23,
No. 36, No. 36M
Specifications
Weight 765 grams
Length 95.2
Diameter 61

Filling Baratol
Detonation
mechanism
7 seconds,
later reduced to 4

Mills bomb is the popular name for a series of prominent British hand grenades. They were the first modern fragmentation grenades in the world.

Contents

Overview

William Mills, a hand grenade designer from Sunderland, patented, developed and manufactured the "Mills bomb" at the Mills Munition Factory in Birmingham, England, in 1915.[1] The Mills bomb was adopted by the British Army as its standard hand grenade in 1915, and designated as the No. 5.[2] It was also used by the Irish Republican Army.

The Mills bomb underwent numerous modifications. The No. 23 was a variant of the No. 5 with a rodded base plug which allowed it to be fired from a rifle. This concept evolved further with the No. 36, a variant with a detachable base plate to allow use with a rifle discharger cup. The final variation of the Mills bomb, the No. 36M, was specially designed and waterproofed with shellac[2] for use initially in the hot climate of Mesopotamia in 1917, but remained in production for many years. By 1918 the No. 5 and No. 23 were declared obsolete and the No. 36 (but not the 36M) followed in 1932.

The Mills was a classic design; a grooved cast iron "pineapple" with a central striker held by a close hand lever and secured with a pin. Although the segmented body helps to create fragments when the grenade explodes, according to Mills' notes the casing was grooved to make it easier to grip and not as an aid to fragmentation. The Mills was a defensive grenade: after throwing the user had to take cover immediately. A competent thrower could manage 15 metres (49 feet) with reasonable accuracy, but the grenade could throw lethal fragments farther than this.

At first the grenade was fitted with a seven-second fuse, but during combat in the Battle of France in 1940 this delay proved too long—giving defenders time to escape the explosion, or even to throw the grenade back—and was reduced to four seconds.

The heavy, segmented bodies of "pineapple" type grenades result in an unpredictable pattern of fragmentation. After the Second World War Britain and the US adopted grenades that contained segmented coiled wire in smooth metal casings. The No. 36M Mk.I remained the standard grenade of the British Armed Forces and was manufactured in the UK until 1972, when it was completely replaced by the L2 series. The 36M remained in service in some parts of the world such as India and Pakistan, where it was manufactured until the early 1980s. That the Mills bomb remained in use for so many years says much about its effectiveness.

Rifle grenade

The Mills bomb was developed into a rifle-grenade by simply attaching a metallic rod to the base. This rod-type rifle-grenade has an effective range of about 150 yards.

To use...

If the soldier did not immediately launch the grenade…The grenade will time-out and explode. It was also found that the repeated launching of grenades by this method caused damage to a rifle’s barrel. These failing lead to the development of a cup-type launcher to replace the rod-type rifle-grenade. This soup-can shaped launcher is attached to a rifles muzzle. The cup-type launcher could launch a Mills bomb with a special gascheck disk screwed to the base to about 200 yards. This arrangement also gave the soldier enough time to accurately launch the grenade.

To use...

If necessary both the rod and the gascheck grenade can be thrown as a standard hand-grenade.

Gallery

References

External links