British artillery ww1 ww2 303 inch (7. Pages in category "World War I artillery of the United Kingdom" The following 36 pages are in this category, out of 36 total. The 105-mm Light Guns (L118 and L119) were the first British guns designed since before WW1 not to have calibrating sights or a gun rule. Breech loading, rifled light field guns, generally from 37mm to 105mm in diameter, were fed with unitized ammunition, consisting of a shell, smokeless powder or cordite propellant, and primer loaded in a fixed metallic case. Or the observer requests fire from an artillery headquarters at some level, which decides if fire will be provided, by which batteries, and the type and amount of ammunition to be provided. See full list on longlongtrail. The RGA were the 'technical' branch of the Royal Artillery who were responsible for much of the WW1 & WW2; Great Britain; Great Britain . The No 199 fuse was the first fuse used with this gun and was superseded by the clockwork 207 fuze, introduced in 1939 with a running time of 43 Tommy’s War – British Military Memorabilia 1914–1918 by Peter Doyle (The Crowood Press Ltd, Marlborough, Wiltshire, 2008) A wide-ranging book, more detailed than the Shire Publication by the same author. Anne Street in Floriana. II Gun of WW1 origine. bdjexfivnpwnxlsacwcvuycqdmxdskyskqaylmovqzlxwkhtioqykzmcztcvbzqksweti