List of Dutch military equipment of World War II
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2014) |
The following is a list of Dutch military equipment of
Knives and bayonets
Model | Blade length | From: | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Sabre M.1912 | variable | - | officers sword |
Klewang (sword) | 62,5 cm | 1898 | officers, NCOs |
Fighting knife M.17 | 20,5 cm | 1917 | front units |
M.95 bayonet | 24.5 cm | 1896 | fitted on Dutch Mannlicher rifles and carbines
|
Small arms
Pistols (manual and semi-automatic)
Type | Base model | Maker | Rounds | Cartridge | From: | Produced | Weight | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
FN Model 1910#Variants | FN Model 1910 | FN and Colt Firearms |
7 | .32 ACP (7.94×25mm) | 1910 | ? | 0.59 kg | semi-automatic |
FN Model 1922 | FN Model 1910 | FN and Colt Firearms |
8 | .380 ACP (9×17mm) | 1925 | ? | 0.7 kg | semi-automatic |
Browning Hi-Power | P35 | FN and Browning | 10 | 7.65x21mm Parabellum | 1935 | 1.500.000 | 1 kg | semi-automatic |
M.73 revolver | M.73 revolver | Stevens, de Beaumont | 6 | 9,4mmR No. 5 (9.4mm) | 1873 | ? | 1.04 kg | for support units |
Mauser C96 | Mauser C96 | Mauser, Hanyang Arsenal | 10 | 7.63×25mm Mauser | 1899 | ? | 1.13 kg | Dutch East Indies only |
Borchhardt-Luger | Luger P08
|
DWM, Mauser
|
8 | 9x19mm Parabellum
|
1898 | 3.000.000 | 0.871 kg | Dutch East Indies only |
Automatic pistols and submachine guns
Type | Base model | Maker | Rounds | Cartridge | From: | Produced | Weight | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MP 28 II |
MP 18 | Haenel | 50 | 7.63×25mm Mauser | 1939 | 2420 | 4.18 kg | sergeant weapon in single cavalry regiment in Dutch East Indies[1] |
Thompson submachine gun M1928 | Thompson submachine gun | Savage Arms and others | 50(extended mags) | .45 ACP (11.43×23mm) | 1942 | 2000 | 4.9 kg | Only in Dutch colonies, some may have not been delivered [2] |
Rifles
Type | Base model | Maker | Rounds | Cartridge | From: | Produced | Weight | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rifle M.95 | Mannlicher M1895 | Steyr-Mannlicher |
5 | 6,5x53,5R | 1896 | 470000 | 3.95 kg | also 8 derived carbine models |
M1941 Johnson rifle | M1941 Johnson rifle | Iver Johnson, FMA | 10 | .30-06 Springfield | 1941 | ~1000 | 4.31 kg | only in Dutch East Indies |
Grenades and grenade launchers
See also: [1]
Grenade | Introduced | Type | Weight, g | comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eihandgranaat No.1 | ? | fragmentation | 600 | used by Germans as "handgranate 312 (h)" |
Eihandgranaat No.2 | ? | fragmentation | 765 | imported Mills No. 23, rod-type rifle launcher |
Eihandgranaat No.3 | ? | concussion | 215 | used by Germans |
Hexiet Rookhandgranaat | ? | smoke | 500 | used by Germans as "333(h)" |
Gashandgranaat | ? | tear gas | ~800 | |
Ronde handgranaat | 1906 | fragmentation | 1065 | colonial army only |
Geweergranaat | 1915 | concussion | ~420 | colonial army only, hand-thrown version of Veldhandgranaat |
Veldhandgranaat | 1917 | fragmentation | 650 | long handle, colonial army only |
Offensieve handgranaat No.2 | 1928 | concussion | 650 | paper&wood body, colonial army only, imported from USA |
Offensieve handgranaat No.3 (US Mk.3) | 1941 | concussion | 310 | paper&steel body, colonial army only |
Machine guns
Infantry and dual-purpose machine guns
The Dutch army in 1940 was in the process of converting their machine guns to the unique 7.92x57mm rimmed cartridge.[3] Exact numbers of machine guns converted is unknown.
Gun | Fire rate, RPM | Effective range | Cartridge | From: | Produced | Weight | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lewis gun M.20 | 550 | 800 | 6.5×53mmR and 7.92×57mmR | 1917 | 9500 | 13 kg | occasional AA gun |
Vickers machine gun | 475 | 2000 | .303 British (7.7×56mmR) and 7.92×57mmR | 1912 | 300 | 23 kg | occasional AA gun,basis for aircraft guns |
MG 08 Spandau heavy machine gun (M.25) | 475 | 2000 | 7.92×57mm Mauser | 1908 | 452 | 69 kg | occasional AA gun, obsolescent |
Schwarzlose MG M.07/12 heavy machine gun (M.8) |
490 | 1300 | 7.92×57mm Mauser | 1905 | 2248 | 41.4 kg | |
Madsen machine gun Geweermitrailleur | 450 | 6.5×53mmR | 1915 | 9.2 kg | Only in the Dutch East Indies. | ||
Madsen machine gun Karabijnmitrailleur | 450 | 6.5×53mmR | 1926 | 8.4 kg | Only in the Dutch East Indies, shortened variant. |
Vehicle and aircraft machine guns
Artillery
Infantry mortars
Model | Caliber | Max. range | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stokes mortar | 81mm | 800 | 1915 | 360 | 47.17 | 25 | heavy recoil, therefore difficult to fire from improvised positions |
Field artillery
Model | Caliber | Max. range | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Krupp 7.5 cm Model 1903 (7-veld) | 75mm | 6000 | 1904 | 304 | 1079 | 8 | partly license-built or upgraded to Siderius Model 02/04 |
8 cm staal | 84mm | 3500 | 1878 | 108 | 1517 | 2.5 | |
12 cm Lang staal | 120mm | 8500 | 1878 | 158 | 3450 | 1.5 | former fortress gun, upgraded in the 1920s |
15cm Krupp heavy field gun | 150mm | 8800 | 1878 | 72 | 4700 | 1 | former fortress gun, upgraded in the 1920s |
10.5 cm Cannon Model 1927 (10-veld) |
105mm | 16500 | 1926 | 52 | 3650 | 7 | |
Krupp 105mm field gun L30 M1905 | 105mm | 9250 | 1912 | 2 | 2835 | 6 | |
120 mm Krupp howitzer M1905 (12 lang 12) | 120mm | 5800 | 1912 | 50 | 1125 | 2 | |
10.5 cm leFH 18 | 105mm | 10675 | 1939 | 8 | 1985 | 5 | imported, training-only |
Bofors 12 cm M. 14 (12 lang 14) | 120mm | 6050 | 1918 | 10 | 1610 | 3 | |
BL 6-inch 30 cwt howitzer (15 lang 15) | 152.4mm | 8400 | 1918 | 30 | 3690 | 2 | only extended-range version |
15 cm sFH 13 (15 lang 17) | 149.1mm | 8600 | 1918 | 44 | 2250 | 3 | World War I war reparations from Germany |
Fortress and siege guns
See [4] for geographic distribution of coastal defenses and fortresses in continental Netherlands. The listing below do include both army and land-based Navy weapons, but do not include 47mm guns, which are counted as anti-tank guns.
- Bofors 37 mm, 45 or 50 calibers barrel length : 23 pieces, of them 12 imported and 11 license-produced
- 75mm guns, 40 calibers barrel length : 63 pieces (2 distinct Krupp types, 5000m range, rapid-fire)
- 120mm guns, 40 calibers barrel length : 18 pieces (2 distinct Krupp types, 12500m range, 9 RPM fire rate)
- 149.1mm or 152.4mm guns, 30 calibers barrel length: 5 (type unknown)
- 149.1mm or 152.4mm guns, 35 calibers barrel length: 6 (type unknown)
- 149.1mm or 152.4mm guns, 40 calibers barrel length: 21 (Krupp guns, 14200m range, 9 RPM fire rate)
- 240mm guns, 30 calibers barrel length: 11 (Krupp guns of the 19th century, 8000m range, 0.25 RPM fire rate)
Infantry guns
Model | Caliber | Max. range | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Krupp light field gun M1894 (6-veld)[5] | 57mm | 5000 | 1894 | 210 | 700 | 5.5 | used also as anti-tank |
Anti-tank guns
Model | Caliber | Penetration 1 | Penetration 2 | Muzzle speed | Max. range | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bohler 47mm gun |
47mm | 58mm@100m | 43mm@500m | 630 | 7000 | 1935 | 380 | 315 | 5 | also very effective as infantry gun |
HIH Siderius 47mm casemate gun | 47mm | 50mm@1000m | 750 | 2500 | 1931 | 8 | 1300 | 18 | semi-automatic[6] | |
Artillerie Inrichtingen 47mm casemate gun |
47mm | 50mm@1000m | 750 | 2500 | 1932 | 60 | 1300 | 9 | low-cost alternative to Siderius gun |
Anti-tank weapons (besides anti-tank guns)
Anti-aircraft weapons
Light anti-aircraft guns
Model | Caliber | Eff. alt. | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MG 08 Spandau heavy machine gun (M.25) | 7.92mm | 1300 | 1908 | 452 | 69 | 475 | obsolescent, also infantry heavy machine gun |
Vickers machine gun (M.18) | 7.7mm | 1300 | 1912 | 300 | 23 | 475 | also infantry heavy machine gun |
Bofors 40 mm gun L/60 (4 tl) |
40mm | 4100 | 1932 | 46 | 1981 | 120 | light/medium AA gun |
3.7 cm Flak 18/36/37/43 L/57 |
37mm | 4200 | 1936 | 3 | 2000 | 150 | no ammunition during war |
Oerlikon 20 mm cannon L/70 (2 tl. No.1) | 20mm | 1300 | 1939 | 120 | 363 | 285 | planned main light AA gun |
Cannone-Mitragliera da 20/77 (Scotti) (2 tl. No.2) | 20mm | 914 | 1939 | 35 | 227.5 | 250 | substitute for Oerlikon gun |
Hispano-Suiza HS.404 | 20mm | 1100 | 1939 | 30 | ~400 | 700 | probably too lightly build barrel resulting in poor accuracy |
Heavy anti-aircraft guns
Model | Caliber | Eff. alt. | From | Produced | Weight, kg | fire rate, RPM | Comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Krupp gun 6 tl | 57mm | 2500 | 1916 | 21 | 7180 | 3 | obsolescent |
Krupp gun 7 tl | 75mm | 3300 | 1916 | 15 | 7980 | 5 | obsolescent |
QF 3-inch 20 cwt (8 tl) | 76.2mm | 3750 | 1917 | 3 | 5990 | 17 | |
Krupp gun (10 tl) | 94mm | 6800 | 1925 | 3 | ~10000 | 7.5 | may be prototypes related to QF 3.7-inch AA gun development |
Vickers Model 1931 (7.5 tl no.1) | 75mm | 8500 | 1935 | 81 | 2825 | 12 | partially license-built, had a fire-control mechanical computer |
Skoda AA gun (7.5 tl no.2) | 75mm | 6500 | 1940 | 9 | 4200 | 25 | model unclear |
Vehicles
Tankettes
Tanks
- Marmon-Herrington CTLS - few used against Japanese on Java. 28 used in the West Indies & Suriname
- FT17 - 1 purchased in 1927 for trials
- Marmon-Herrington CTMS - 26 used in the West Indies & Suriname
- Marmon-Herrington MTLS - 19-20 used in the West Indies & Suriname
- KNILin 1937
- Carden-Lloyd m1936 - 75 ordered but only 25 delivered to the KNIL
- M3 tanks - 50 were being transported when the Dutch East Indies fell.
Armored cars
Vehicle | Developed | Produced | Armament |
---|---|---|---|
L181 (M-36)
|
1936 | 12 | 37mm Bofors cannon and 3x 7.92mm Lewis machine gun
|
L180 (M-38)
|
1938 | 14 | 37mm Bofors cannon and 3x 7.92mm Lewis machine gun
|
M39 Pantserwagen
|
1939 | 12 | 37mm Bofors cannon and 3x 7.92mm Lewis machine gun
|
Ehrhardt Potkachel[7] | 1918 | 1 | 57mm Krupp gun 6tl |
Alvis Strausser AC3D[8] | 1938 | 12 | a 12.7 mm Colt-Browning MG in the turret and a 6.5 mm Vickers machine gun on the left of the driver |
M3A1 Scout Car | 1941 | 40 | two .30-caliber M2 Browning machine gun
|
GMC 'Kippenhok'[9] | 1931 | 3 | three 6.5mm lewis m20 machine guns |
Morris Wijnman 'Koekblik'[10] | 1932 | 3 | Space for up to four 6.5mm lewis m20 machine guns |
Wilton-Fijenoord[11] | 1933 | 3 | three 6.5mm Lewis m20 machine guns |
Overvalwagen[12] | 1940 | 90 | different versions had different armament |
Utility tractor
- VCL Utility Tracor - 50 ordered for the KNIL
- Praga TIII/3 Artillery Tractor - 1 prototype delivered to the KNIL.
Engineering and command
- L180(M-38) - 2 of 14 armored cars were built as command cars (dummy main gun made of wood).
Trucks
All numbers are for European part of Dutch armed forces.
- horses 30000
- Trado 1200 - mostly for towing artillery and 1 motorized light infantry division
- DAF-139 amphibious truck (prototype testing at outbreak of war)
- Ford Model AA 380 - in AA units[citation needed]
- Ford GP - in Dutch East Indies cavalry units
Passenger cars
- unknown models (~70-140 total) for carrying officers
Motorcycles
- unknown model (at least 840 in 2 motorized cavalry regiments)
Miscellaneous vehicles
- bicycles (at least 1500000)
ofcourse
At the moment of the German attack on 10 May 1940 the Dutch European Navy consisted of 50 vessels:
- 1 light cruiser
- 3 coastal defense ships
- 10 destroyers
- 12 minelayers
- 4 minesweepers
- 6 submarines
- 14 auxiliary and light vessels
Also, 31 various vessels were under construction. Of these, 6 were eventually completed in England and 21 in Nazi Germany.
Present in the
Destroyed or scuttled during
- Destroyer Van Galen [Rotterdam, by a Stuka attack]
- Destroyer escort Christiaan Cornelis (scuttled after being damaged by coastal artillery)
- Destroyer escort Z3 (scuttled)
- Destroyer escort G16 (scuttled)
- Gunboat Johan Maurits van Nassau (sunk by Luftwaffe aircraft)
- Gunboat Friso (sunk by Luftwaffe aircraft)
- Gunboat Brinio (scuttled)
- Gunboat Braga (scuttled)
- Gunboat Helfring (scuttled)
- Gunboat Freyr (scuttled)
- Minelayer Hydra
- Minelyaer Bulgia
- Minesweeper Abraham van Hulst (heavily damaged by Luftwaffe aircraft attack and scuttled)
- Minesweeper Pieter Floriszoon (scuttled)
- Minesweeper M III
- Submarine HNLMS O 12 (scuttled)
- Coastal defense ship HNLMS IJmuiden(scuttled)
Escaped to England during
- Light cruiser Sumatra
- Destroyer escort Z5
- Destroyer escort Z6
- Destroyer escort Z7
- Destroyer escort Z8
- Destroyer escort G13
- Destroyer escort G15
- Gunboat Flores
- Gunboat Gruno
- Minelayer Willem van der Zaan
- Minelayer Medusa
- Minelayer Van Maerlant
- Minelayer Douwe Aukes
- Minelayer Nautiles[13]
- Minelayer Jan van Brakel[14]
- Minesweeper Jan van Gelder
- Torpedo boat TM51
- Submarine O9
- Submarine O10
- Submarine O13
- Light-cruiser Jacob van Heemskerck (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Destroyer leader Isaac Sweers (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Submarine O21 (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Submarine O22 (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Submarine O23 (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Submarine O24 (under construction at outbreak of war)
- Many tugs, pilot boats and patrol boats
Captured by the Germans:
- Minesweepers MI (sunk and raised by Germans)
- Minesweepers MII (sunk and raised by Germans)
- Minesweepers MIV (sunk and raised by Germans)
- Gunboat Tyr
- Gunboat Balder
- Gunboat Hadda (unarmed at outbreak of war)
- Gunboat Thor (unarmed at outbreak of war)
- Minelayer Vidar
- Torpedo workship Vidar
- Submarines O 8
- Submarine O 11
- Coastal defense ship HMLMS Gelderland
- Coastal defense ship HNLMS Hertog Hendrik
- Cruiser De Zeven Provincien (under construction, not used by Germans)
- Cruiser HNLMS Eendracht(under construction, not used by Germans)
- Destroyer leader HNLMS Tjerk Hiddes (under construction, scrapped by Germans)
- Destroyer leader HNLMS Gerard Callenburgh (under construction, damaged and repaired by Germans)
- Destroyer leader HNLMS Philips van Almonde(under construction, scrapped by Germans)
- Submarine O 25(under construction, finished by Germans)
- Submarine O 26(under construction, finished by Germans)
- Submarine O 27(under construction, finished by Germans)
- 6 Minesweepers (under construction, names not assigned, all used by Germans)
- Tanker (under construction, name not assigned, finished by Germans)
- 10 Fast attack craft (E-boats) (under construction, names not assigned, all finished and used by Germans in Mediterranean)
At the time of Japanese attack on 7 December 1941, the Dutch Navy in the East Indies comprised 78 vessels. Most of them were destroyed defending Java island:
- 3 light cruisers
- 7 destroyers
- 15 submarines
- 7 minelayers
- 11 minesweepers
- 35 auxiliary or small ships (of them 8 tankers)
Task Force One (Doorman; off Paternoster Island)
- Light cruiser De Ruyter
- Light cruiser Tromp
- Destroyer Van Ghent
- Destroyer Kortenaer
- Destroyer Piet Hein
- Destroyer Witte de With
- Destroyer Banckert
Task Force Two (Sunda Strait en route Singapore)
NEI Submarine Flotilla (at Surabaya)
- submarine tender Zuiderkruis
- SS K-VI
- SS K-VIII
- SS K-X
Submarine Division 1
- SS O-16 (Karimata Strait)
- SS K-XVII (north of Singapore)
- SS K-XVII
Submarine Division 2
- SS K-IX
- SS K-XI (north of Singapore)
- SS K-XII (north of Singapore)
- SS K-XIII (north of Singapore)
Submarine Division 3
- SS K-XIV (South China Sea)
- SS K-XV (South China Sea)
- SS K-XVI (South China Sea)
Submarine Division 4
- SS O-19 (South China Sea)
- SS O-20 (South China Sea)
Mine Service (at Surabaya)
- CM Gouden Leeuw (at Tarakan)
- CM Prinz Van Oranje
- CM Krakatau
- CM Pro Patria (at Palembang)
- CM Serdang
- CM Willem van der Zaan (Lingga)
- CM Rigel
Minesweeper Division 3
- AMc Alor
- AMc Aroe
- AMc Bantam
- AMc Bogor
- AMc Ceram
- AMc Cheribon
Minesweeper Division 4 (at Surabaya)
- AMc Djember
- AMc Djombang
- AMc Djampea
- AMc Enggano
- AMc Endeh
Torpedo Division (at Surabaya)
- PT TM-4 to TM-15 (12 vessels)
- Tanker AO Aldegonda
- Tanker AO Benakat (4763 tons, 10 knots)
- Tanker AO Djirak (4325 tons, 10 knots)
- Tanker AO Josefina
- Tanker AO Juno (2741 tons, 9 knots)
- Tanker AO Paula (2700 tons, 12 knots)
- Tanker AO Pendopo (7150 tons, 10 knots)
- Tanker AO Petronella
- AT Kraus
- AT Pief
- AT Gina
- AT Jules
- AT Nolly
- AT Tata
- AT Flip
- AT Rolf
- AT Hector
- AT Paul
- AT Teddy
- AR Moeara Boelian
- AH Op Ten Noort
Aircraft
The Dutch before war have an extensive aircraft industry, but most of the aircraft produced were exported and not counted here.
Name | Place of manufacture |
Primary role(s) |
# used in Europe |
# used in Indonesia |
years in use | comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fokker D.XXI | Dutch | fighter | 36 | 0 | 1936-1940 | |
Curtiss P-6 Hawk | Dutch (license) | fighter | 0 | 11 | 1930-1942 | also 3 P-6 were destroyed before war |
Curtiss H-75 Hawk (export Curtiss P-36) |
US | fighter | 0 | 24 | 1940-1942 | model Hawk 75A-7 |
Brewster B339 (F2A-2 Buffalo) |
US | fighter | 0 | 71 | 1941-1942 | |
Fokker D.XXIII | Dutch | fighter | 1 | 0 | 1939-1940 | tandem engines, prototype under test at outbreak of war |
Fokker D.XVII | Dutch | fighter/trainer | 7 | 0 | 1932-1940 | 2 of 7 destroyed on ground at beginning of war |
Fokker G.I | Dutch | heavy fighter | 35 | 0 | 1937-1940 | also 1 Fokker G.I destroyed before war |
Fokker G.I(export version) | Dutch | heavy fighter | 6 | 0 | 1940-1940 | 24 were produced, but refit was not finished in time |
Fokker T.V | Dutch | bomber | 15 | 0 | 1938-1940 | also 1 Fokker T.V destroyed before war |
Fokker C.V | Dutch | bomber/reconnaissance | 28 | 0 | 1924-1940 | only 28 of 67 were operational at start of war |
Fokker C.VIII | Dutch | reconnaissance | 1 | 0 | 1928-1940 | land-version (prototype) of seaplane Fokker C.VIII-W) |
Fokker C.VIII-W | Dutch | Maritime patrol | 9 | 0 | 1928-1940 | 5 of 9 fled to England and were scrapped immediately |
Fokker C.X | Dutch | bomber/reconnaissance/trainer | 20 | 13 | 1933-1942 | |
Koolhoven F.K.51 | Dutch | trainer/reconnaissance | 83 | 38 | 1935-1942 | |
Koolhoven F.K.52 | Dutch | fighter/reconnaissance | 5 | 0 | 1937-1940 | also 1 aircraft lost before war |
Koolhoven F.K.58 | Dutch | fighter | 18 | 0 | 1938-1940 | manned by Poles, fought for France (not in Dutch army) |
Fokker S.IX | Dutch | trainer | 50 | 0 | 1935-1942 | some escaped to England and were scrapped immediately |
Bücker Bü 131 |
Germany | trainer | 0 | ? | 1935-1942 | |
Curtiss-Wright CW-21B | US | interceptor | 0 | 24 | 1942-1942 | 17 ready at start of Japanese attack |
Dornier Do J Wal |
Dutch (license) | Maritime patrol | 1 | 5 | 1937-1942 | most were already scrapped at outbreak of war[citation needed] |
Dornier Do 24 | Dutch (license) | maritime patrol | 0 | 37 | 1937-1942 | replacement for Dornier Wal , imported and license-produced in Netherlands.
|
Fokker T.IVa |
Dutch | Maritime patrol/torpedo bomber | 0 | 33 | 1927-1942 | |
Fokker C.XI |
Dutch | scout seaplane | 4 | 10 | 1935-1942 | operated from Dutch cruisers and destroyers |
Fokker C.VII |
Dutch | seaplane trainer | 0 | 12 | 1927-1942 | 30 were produced, but 18 in Europe retired before war |
Fokker C.XIV-W | Dutch | trainer/Maritime patrol | 13 | 11 | 1927-1942 | 12 were transferred from Europe to Dutch East Indies after war in Europe was lost |
Fokker F.XVIII | Dutch | airliner/Maritime patrol | 0 | 5 | 1940-1942 | stop-gap ASW aircraft, later reverted to airliner |
Fokker T.VIII | Dutch | Maritime patrol | 11 | 0 | 1938-1940 | some aircraft escaped to England and many captured by Germans |
Consolidated PBY Catalina | US | Maritime patrol | 0 | 48 | 1935-1942 | 36 Consolidated 28-5 (export PBY-5) and 12 PBY-5A[citation needed] |
Martin 139 (export B-10) | US | Bomber | 0 | 121 | 1938-1945 | Pre-WW2 bomber in Dutch possession |
Fokker T.IX | Dutch | Bomber | 1 | 0 | 1939-1940 | prototype being repaired at outbreak of war |
Cartridges and shells
- .32 ACP (7.94×25mm)
- .380 ACP (9×25mm)
- 11mm French Ordnance (11.46×30mm)
- 6.5×53mmR (main rifle cartridge)
- 7.92×56R (main MG cartridge)
- .303 British (7.7×56mmR)
References
- ^ "KNILCavalry". Archived from the original on 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
- ^ "Axis History Forum • Dutch sub machine guns". Archived from the original on 11 March 2014. Retrieved 11 March 2014.
- ^ "7.92 X 57R DUTCH SCHWARZLOSE | Cartridgecollector.net". www.cartridgecollector.net.
- ^ "Coastal artillery [War over Holland - May 1940: the Dutch struggle]". Waroverholland.nl. 10 May 1940. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ^ "57 mm infantry gun [6-veld] [War over Holland - May 1940: The Dutch struggle]". Archived from the original on 5 December 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2014.
- ^ "HIHSiderius3". Overvalwagen.com. Archived from the original on 7 March 2014. Retrieved 8 March 2014.
- ^ "Ehrhardt Potkachel". tanks-encyclopedia.com. 20 January 2021.
- ^ "Alvis-Straussler Armoured Cars in the Netherlands East Indies". warfare.gq.
- ^ "GMC Improvised Armoured Cars". Tanks Encyclopedia. 24 August 2019.
- ^ "Morris 'Koekblikje' Armored Car". Tanks Encyclopedia. 21 May 2019.
- ^ "Wilton-Fijenoord Armored Car (1933)". 30 December 2017.
- ^ "Braat Overvalwagen (1940)". www.tanks-encyclopedia.com.
- ^ "Minelayer Hr.Ms. Nautilus". Netherlandsnavy.nl. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
- ^ "Dutch minelayer Jan van Brakel". Netherlandsnavy.nl. Retrieved 14 February 2022.