Oil Drums WW2

Oil Drums WW2 Low-poly 3D model

Verification details of the FBX file
Files
Binary FBX
Scene
No unsupported objects
Geometry
No N-gonsNo faceted geometryManifold geometry
Textures and Materials
PBR texturesNo embed texturesSquare texturesPower of 2 texture sizesAssigned materials
UVs
No UV overlapsUV unwrapped model
Naming
Allowed characters
Description

Oil Drums WW2

Photorealistic

PBR/GAMEREADY

4K Texture

Low-Poly

A drum (also called a barrel) is a cylindrical shipping container used for shipping bulk cargo. Drums can be made of steel, dense paperboard (commonly called a fiber drum), or plastic, and are generally used for the transportation and storage of liquids and powders. Drums are often stackable, and have dimensions designed for efficient warehouse and logistics use. This type of packaging is frequently certified for transporting dangerous goods. Proper shipment requires the drum to comply with all applicable regulationsHenry Wehrhahn, employee of Nellie Bly's Iron Clad Manufacturing Company of New York, received two patents in December 1905 that would lead to the modern 55-gallon steel drum[2][3] Use of 200-litre drums became widespread in World War II, the first war in which trucks, cold rolled steel, stamp or pattern forging machinery and welding were widely available. They were first utilized by the Axis powers (Germany and Italy), but were quickly adopted by Allies.[4] The drums helped win the Guadalcanal Campaign in the first U.S. offensive in the South Pacific Theater. The U.S. Navy could not maintain command of the sea long enough to offload aviation gasoline for aircraft ashore, so the drums were often transported to the island on fast ships, such as destroyers, and shoved over the sides (or, time permitting, lowered in cargo nets). Because gasoline's density is much less than that of water, the drums floated. Navy Seabees in small craft corralled the drums.

Item rating
0 0
Oil Drums WW2
$15.00
 
Royalty Free License 
Oil Drums WW2
$15.00
 
Royalty Free License 
Response 100% in 1.5h
3D Modeling

3D Model formats

Format limitations
  • Cinema 4D 2024 (.c4d)380 KBVersion: 2024Renderer: V-Ray
  • Autodesk FBX 2020 (.fbx)1.02 MB
  • OBJ (.obj, .mtl) (2 files)846 KB
  • Collada (.dae)166 KB
  • glTF (.gltf, .glb)20.9 MB
  • 3D Studio (.3ds)68.2 KB
  • Blender 4.0 (.blend)914 KBVersion: 4.0Renderer: Cycles 4
  • JPG (.jpg)8.3 MB

3D Model details

  • Ready for 3D Printing
  • Animated
  • Rigged
  • VR / AR / Low-poly
  • PBR
  • Geometry Polygon mesh
  • Polygons 5,348
  • Vertices 5,675
  • Textures
  • Materials
  • UV Mapping
  • Unwrapped UVs Non-overlapping
  • Plugins used
  • Publish date2025-03-11
  • Model ID#5942862
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