No voi perk...

Mulla ei oo hajuakaan miinoista, mutta tuon mallin ja hiirikolo jutun luin netistä "finnish jaeger platoon" Kuva mikä jaeger platoonilla on netin miinasta on samanlainen mitä mun kauppaamassa..
Kuvia en uskaltanut (jaksanut) kopioida, mutta tämmöinen lontoonkielinen teksti on..
PICTURE: Antitank-mine m/42. (Photo taken in Panssarimuseo). CLICK THUMBNAIL TO SEE LARGER PIC (32 KB).
Construction:
Disc-shaped sheet metal body with pressure plate on top.
Fuse type:
Pressure activated fuse + possible anti-lift fuses
Basic principle:
Typical pressure-activated antitank-mine.
Location:
Buried to ground, top of pressure plate 1-cm below ground.
Height of mine:
8.5 cm
Diameter of mine:
32.4 cm
Diameter of pressure plate:
15 cm
Weight:
8.5 kg
Explosive charge:
5 kg of moulded amatol
Fuse activated by:
Pressure of about 240-kg on top of the mine
Country of origin:
Germany
Transport method: Wood frames each containing 2 mines and boxes each containing 1 mine. Fuses arrived in cardboard boxes each containing 6 fuses.
PICTURE: Transport box of antitank-mine m/42.(Photo taken in Jalkaväkimuseo). CLICK THUMBNAIL TO SEE LARGER PIC (44 KB).
This antitank-mine is German "Tellermine 42". German military introduced it to their own use in 1942. Some 9.8 million were manufactured between August of 1942 and German collapse in 1945. The mine was disc-shaped and had sheet metal body. Like most German antitank-mine designs it had anti-lift fuse wells for fuses, to which one could install additional fuses to booby-trap the mine. These additional fuses with their wires detonated the mine if it was carelessly lifted. Like usual in German antitank mines the mine had handle made from metal wire in its side for carrying it. International sources claim that this mine had TNT-filling, but Finnish manuals list it with only amatol filling. It could be used with two optional fuses: "T.mi.Z. 42" originally introduced with it and "T.mi.Z. 43" more commonly used in "Tellermine 43" antitank-mine. From these two "T.mi.Z. 42 was typical pressure-activated fuse, but besides pressure activation "T.mi.Z. 43" fuse had also anti-withdrawal system, which activated the fuse if anybody tried carelessly removed it from the mine. During Continuation War Finland bought large number of these mines and they saw large-scale use with Finnish Army. Due to shape of the quite visible pressure plate located on top of the mine US soldiers nicknamed this mine "mushroom".