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Does the 199 AA fuze have a red band painted around the timing ring that you move around to set the time of the fuze. Seem to have seen these painted from somewhere, unless it was used for another type of projectile.
The red painted or red lacquered ring denotes they were filled RD 202, a slow burning powder. The practice stopped 9th June 1949. Fuzes so marked included - No. 88, No. 220, No, 221B and No. 390 (not all marks). The Text Book of Ammunition, 1936, states the time rings of the No. 199 fuze are filled with a new composition, but doesn't state what it is. The plate for the fuze in the same publication doesn't show any red markings.
Hmm, I thought that the red filling ring indicated that both time and percussion elements were live whereas the absence of the red ring indicated that only the time element was live. I could be wrong, I often am!
Dave
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