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The AB 500-1 (Abwurfbehälter) was a cluster bomb used by the Luftwaffe during World War II.

AB 500-1
TypeCluster bomb
Place of origin Nazi Germany
Service history
Used byLuftwaffe
WarsWorld War II
Specifications
Mass20 kg (44 lb)[1]
Length2.03 m (6 ft 8 in)
Diameter46 cm (1 ft 6 in)[2]

AB 500-1


The body of the AB 500-1 was constructed of mild sheet steel and was of clamshell construction and hinged at the tail. It was carried horizontally in either a bomb bay or on a fuselage or wing hardpoint. The container was divided into three sections; a dome-shaped nose section with dual fuzes, a cylindrical center section which held the bombs, and an empty tail cone with four fins reinforced with struts. About midway, there was a Ladekopf MVOV 500-1 charging head that was welded to the container and in the center of the container, there was a channel for the electric cables which ran from the charging head to the nose fuzes. The two halves of the container were held together by a shear wire which passed through a steel anvil, in the lower part of the fuze pocket. When released an electric charge was sent from the charging head to the fuzes which after a short delay triggered a small exploder under the fuze which sheared the wire holding the container together. The case then opened and allowed the bombs to fall out. The containers were painted khaki.[2]

There were a number of different sub-munition configurations available:


Sub-munitions


Type Model Length Diameter Weight Explosive Weight Explosive
Fragmentation 10kg (P.A) Type I & II 55 cm (21.5 in) 90 mm (3.54 in) 9.5 kg (21 lb) 1.1 kg (2 lb 8 oz) 70/30 Picric acid/Mononitronaphthalene
10kg (P) Type I & II 55 cm (21.5 in) 90 mm (3.54 in) 9.5 kg (21 lb) ? ?
SD 10 A Type I & II 55 cm (21.6 in) 86 mm (3.4 in) 10 kg (22 lb) 900 g (2 lb) 60/40 Amatol or TNT
Incendiary B2 & B2.2 53 cm (21 in) 51 mm (2 in) 2–2.2 kg (4 lb 7 oz – 4 lb 14 oz) ? Thermite
B1 & B1.3 34 cm (13.5 in) 51 mm (2 in) 1–1.3 kg (2 lb 3 oz – 2 lb 14 oz) ? Thermite
Fragmentation SD 1 170 mm (6.7 in) 50 mm (2 in) 910 g (2 lb) 112 g (4 oz) TNT[3]
SD 1 FRZ 150 mm (6 in) 50 mm (2 in) 500 g (1.1 lb) 120 g (4.2 oz) 60/40 Amatol or TNT[4]

SD 10 FRZ


These were French made fragmentation bombs that the Germans captured after the Fall of France. There were two variants comprising two sub-variants.[5] The descriptions in TM 9-1985-6, French and Italian Explosive Ordnance and TM 9-1985-2, German Explosive Ordnance match the 10kg (P) more closely than the 10kg (P.A). However, TM 9-1985-6 makes no mention of German service for either bomb and TM 9-1985-2 only has a description with no diagram or mention of the French model designations 10kg (P) or 10kg (P.A). Since they had similar dimensions and performance it's possible that they both could have been used.


SD 10 A


Was a German made fragmentation bomb and there were two variants the Type I and Type II. They differed in their construction details but their dimensions and performance were similar.


B2 & B2.2


There were two bombs in this family of incendiaries the 2kg B2EZ and 2.2kg B2.2EZ. The construction details differed from one model to another but their dimensions and performance were similar. Both had cylindrical bodies made from a light alloy called Elektron, had 3 finned sheet metal tail cones with a circular strut, and were filled with thermite. The bodies were painted olive green and tails were dark green.[2]


B1 & B1.3


Instead of being one type there was a family of German 1kg and 1.3kg incendiary bombs. Both the 1kg and 1.3kg bombs had the same subvariant designations E, EZA and EZB. The construction details differed from one model to another but their dimensions and performance were similar. Both had cylindrical bodies made from Elektron, had 3 finned sheet metal tail cones with a circular strut, and were filled with thermite. The bodies were unpainted and tails were painted dark green.[2]


SD 1


This was a German light fragmentation bomb that may have been based on German 50 mm mortar ammunition used by the 5 cm Granatwerfer 36 which was modified by adding a new circular 8-fin tail assembly. SD 1 bombs were painted yellow.[2]


SD 1 FRZ


This was based on captured 50 mm (2 in) mortar rounds for the Lance Grenades de 50 mm modèle 37 light mortar used by the French Army which was modified by adding a new 6-fin tail assembly. SD 1 FRZ bombs were yellowish-brown in color.[2]




See also



References


  1. "L.Dv. 4200; Die deutsche Abwurfmunition, Serie P, Blatt 5a: AB 500-3 B m. 4 SD 70 bzw. AB 500-3 B m. 4 SC 50 (Stand: Juli 1944)". michaelhiske.de. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  2. United States War Office (1953). German explosive ordnance : (bombs, fuzes, rockets, land mines, grenades and igniters). United States Government Printing Office. OCLC 713755660.
  3. Poulin, Olivier (2017-07-31). "WW2 Equipment Data: German Projectiles - 50mm to 80mm Mortar Rounds". WW2 Equipment Data. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  4. "Инженерные боеприпасы (W-1) - w-1.html". saper.isnet.ru. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  5. United States Department of the Army (1953). Italian and French explosive ordnance, 1953. U.S. G.P.O. OCLC 506057726.



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