BL 12-inch Mk VIII naval gun facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Ordnance BL 12-inch Mk VIII gun |
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Muzzle of gun on HMS Canopus, 1916
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Type | Naval Gun, Coastal Defence |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
In service | 1895–1927 |
Used by | Royal Navy |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Designer | Woolwich Arsenal |
Manufacturer | Vickers |
Variants | Mk VIII, VIIIe, VIIIv |
Specifications | |
Mass | 46 tons barrel & breech |
Length | 445.6 in (11.32 m) |
Barrel length | 35 ft 5 in (10.80 m) (35.43 calibres) |
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Shell | 850 lb (390 kg) |
Calibre | 12-inch (304.8 mm) |
Breech | Welin interrupted screw |
Recoil | hydraulic |
Elevation | - 3 / +13.5 degrees |
Traverse | +150 / -150 degrees |
Rate of fire | Battleships: 1 in 70 sec. Monitors: 1 in 60 sec. |
Muzzle velocity | 2,367 ft/s (721 m/s) |
Effective firing range | 10,000 yd (9,100 m) |
Maximum firing range | 26,000 yd (24,000 m) |
The BL 12-inch Mark VIII naval gun was one of the first large British rifled breech-loading naval guns designed for the higher pressures generated by the new cordite propellant of the 1890s, and Britain's first large wire-wound gun. It represented a major advance compared to previous British guns.
Contents
The gun was installed on the Majestic-class battleships from 1895 and on the Canopus-class battleships from 1899. During World War I guns removed from the obsolete Majestic class were mounted in Lord Clive-class monitors for shore bombardment.
Land service
From 1921 to 1926 two guns from the decommissioned battleship HMS Illustrious were in service in the Tyne Turrets for coast defence, north and south of the mouth of the River Tyne in the northeast of England.
Problems in service
During bombardment service when mounted in the Lord Clive-class monitors deposition of copper from the projectile driving bands needed frequent removal. However, problems with the inner liners were more serious. The continual drag of the driving bands caused the liner to be gradually stretched forward. The resulting protrusion at the muzzle could simply be cut off, but in addition the liner began to form a ridge in the barrel near the shoulders of the outer ‘A’ tube, where the inner ‘A’ tube was keyed to the outer. The ridge accumulated copper from the driving bands, which could give sufficient retardation to the projectile to start the fuze, which resulted in a premature detonation either within the bore, or soon after leaving the muzzle. This happened several times during bombardment service, including an occasion when Lord Clive showered pieces of shell over the French destroyer Aventurier. The ‘steel choke’ restriction could be temporarily removed by rubbing down with an emery-covered block pulled back and forth in the bore, but the only permanent cure was to fit new guns with a modified design of liner, which had a different arrangement of internal shoulders.
Images for kids
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HMS Canopus bombarding Turkish forts, Dardanelles March 1915. Photo by Ernest Brooks.
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The starboard 12-inch (305 mm) Mark VIII gun in one of the turrets aboard the battleship HMS Illustrious. The gun's breech is open.
See also
- List of naval guns
Weapons of comparable role, performance and era
- 12"/35 caliber gun - contemporary US Navy weapon
- 12-inch gun M1895 - contemporary US Army coast defence weapon
- Canon de 305 mm Modèle 1893/96 gun - contemporary French naval and railway weapon