- 17pdr gun mounted in the Archer SP
- Sherman VC, Firefly - 17 pounder gun - 1944
- Landing vehicle Tracked - 75 mm howitzer - 1944
- Light Tank (Airborne) - M22 (Locust) - 37 mm gun - 1943
- Medium Tank M4A3 (Sherman IV) - 75 mm gun - 1942
- Cruiser Tank, Comet - 77 mm gun - 1945
- The Parts of a Tank
- Cutaway of tank 2
- Cruiser Tank Mk VI - Crusader III - 6 pounder gun - 1942
- Cruiser Tank Mk VI
- Cruiser Tank Mk IV (A13 Mk II) - 2 pounder gun - 1939
- Medium Tank M4A1 - 76 mm gun -1944
- Medium Tank M3A5 (Grant II) - 75 mm gun - 1941
- Cruiser Tank, Cromwell IV - 75 mm gun - 1943
- Light Tank Mk VIA - Vickers machine guns - 1937
- Light Tank M3A1 (Stuart III) - 37 mm gun - 1942
- Light Tank M3A3 (Stuart V) - 37 mm gun - 1942
- Cutaway of tank
- Light tank Mk VII, Tetrarch - 2 pounder gun - 1938-1940
- Light Tank M24 (Chaffee) - 75 mm gun - 1944
- 3 inch Rapid Fire Gun
3 inch Rapid Fire Gun - 5 inch rapid fire
5 inch rapid fire - 3 inch R.F. Gun
3 inch R.F. Gun - United States Carriage model of 1896
United States Carriage model of 1896 - Latest model 12inch disappearing carriage and gun
United States Carriage model of 1896 - 4.7 inch Q.F. (Pedestal Mount.)
4.7 inch Q.F. (Pedestal Mount.) - 12 Inch Disappearing
12 Inch Disappearing - 12 inch barbette - non-disappearing
12 inch barbette - non-disappearing - 4.7 inch 120 mm q.f. Gun on centre pivot pedestal mounting
4.7 inch 120 mm q.f. Gun on centre pivot pedestal mounting - Crossbowmen killing Deer and Wild Boars
From MS. Gaston Phosbus. Fourteenth century - 12 Inch Disappearing - raised
12 Inch Disappearing - raised - 5 Inch R.F. gun (showing breech mechanism)
5 Inch R.F. gun (showing breech mechanism) - 4.7 inch. Breech closing and firing gear
4.7 inch. Breech closing and firing gear - 5 inch Rapid-fire gun (Pedestal Mount.)
5 inch Rapid-fire gun (Pedestal Mount.) - Mounted Crossbowman, with Cranequin crossbow, and a quarrel in his hat
Doubtless on the coasts of Scandinavia and North Germany, the chief home of these composite crossbows after the time of the Crusades, whalebone was easily obtainable, whilst in other parts of the Continent, the pieces which formed the heart of the bow, were made from the straightened horn of an animal. This ancient form of crossbow with a composite bow, survived in an improved form in Scandinavia and in the north of Europe, as a weapon of sport and war, till about 1460, or for nearly a hundred years after the far superior crossbow with a thick steel bow and a windlass had been in use in France, Spain and Italy. Some of these later weapons were made so strong in the fifteenth century, that after the invention of the powerful cranequin for bending steel bows, this apparatus was also employed for bending the composite bow