16-inch/50-caliber Mark 2 gun explained

16"/50 caliber Mark 2 Gun
Origin:United States
Type:
Is Ranged:yes
Is Artillery:yes
Service:1924–47 as coastal defense gun
Used By:
Wars:World War II
Design Date:1916
Manufacturer:
Production Date:1917–22
Number:71
Variants:Marks 2 and 3 Mods 0 and 1
Weight:284000lb
Length:68inchesft0inchesin (ftin) (without breech)
Part Length:66inchesft8inchesin (ftin) bore (50 calibers)
Cartridge:
  • AP Mark 3: 2110lb armor-piercing (AP) (Naval)
  • AP Mark 12: 2240lb AP (Army)
Caliber:16inches
Rate:2 rounds per minute
Velocity:
  • AP Mark 3: 2800ft/s (Naval charge)
  • AP Mark 3: 2750ft/s (Army charge)
  • AP Mark 12: 2650ft/s (Army charge)
Range:45100yd at 46° elevation on coast defense mount
Recoil:49inches
Elevation:
  • -4 to +40 degrees (turret)
  • -7 to +65 degrees (casemate)
Traverse:
  • -145° to +145° (turret)
  • 145° total (casemate)

The 16"/50 caliber Mark 2 gun and the near-identical Mark 3 were guns originally designed and built for the United States Navy as the main armament for the South Dakota-class battleships and s. The successors to the 16"/45 caliber gun Mark I gun, they were at the time among the heaviest guns built for use as naval artillery.[1]

As part of the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922, both of these ship classes were cancelled part way through construction, rendering surplus about 70 examples of the 16-inch/50 which had already been built. Twenty were released to the United States Army, between 1922 and 1924, for use by the Coast Artillery Corps, the rest were kept in storage for future naval use. Only ten of the twenty available guns were deployed (in five two-gun batteries) prior to 1940.[2]

When the design of the began in 1938, it was initially assumed these ships would use the surplus guns. However, due to a miscommunication between the two Navy departments involved in the design, the ships required a lighter gun than the Mark 2/Mark 3, resulting, ultimately, in the design of the 267900lb 16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun. In January 1941 all but three of the remaining fifty Mark 2 and Mark 3 guns were released to the Army. They were the primary armament of 21 two-gun batteries built in the United States and its territories during World War II.[3] However, none of these were fired in battle.

Development

The first example of a US 16-inch gun was an Army weapon, the M1895, approved for construction in 1895 and completed in 1902; only one was built.[4] The first US Navy 16-inch gun was the 16-inch/45 caliber Mark 1 gun, which armed the Colorado-class battleships launched 1920–21.[5] [6] The second Navy design, the Mark 2, was intended as armament for the planned South Dakota-class battleships, and also selected for the modified design of the s, replacing the 14-inch/50 caliber gun that was originally used for the design.[7] [8] The Mark 3 was a slightly modified version of the Mark 2.[9]

With the United States entering into the Washington Naval Treaty, the terms limited the United States to a maximum displacement of 35000LT. As both the South Dakota-class battleships and Lexington-class battlecruisers exceeded this limit, the Navy was required to cancel their construction, doing so in 1922.[10] While two of the Lexington class were re-ordered as s, none of them were completed with the barbettes necessary to mount these guns. Construction of the 16-inch Mark 2 and Mark 3 guns was also cancelled with 70 completed, plus the prototype, Gun No. 42. Twenty of the existing guns were transferred to the Army in 1922 to supplement the Army's more massive and much more expensive 16-inch gun M1919, of which only seven were ever deployed. The remaining Mk2/Mk3 guns were retained for use on future warships. With funding lacking until 1940, five batteries of two Mk2/Mk3 guns each were built 1924–40 in the harbor defenses of Pearl Harbor, the Panama Canal Zone (Pacific side), and San Francisco. They were designated 16-inch Navy guns MkIIMI and MkIIIMI in Army service. A version of the M1919 barbette mount used for the M1919 guns was used for these batteries, except at Fort Funston in San Francisco, where Battery Davis was the prototype for the M2 mount and casemating.[11] Based on the Coast Artillery's experience operating heavy weapons in World War I, especially the French-made 400 mm (15.75 inch) Modèle 1916 railway howitzer, all barbette carriages for 16-inch guns were designed with an elevation of 65 degrees to allow plunging fire as enemy ships approached.[12] [13]

In 1938, with the signing of the Second London Naval Treaty, the tonnage limit for battleships was relaxed to 45,000 tons. After this, the U.S. Navy began design of a ship that would fit this higher tonnage limit, eventually resulting in the . The larger size would allow for guns with a 16-inch caliber and a 50-caliber length, larger than the 16-inch/45 caliber Mark 6 guns used on the North Carolina- and South Dakota-class battleships. While the Iowa-class battleships were under construction, the Bureau of Ordnance assumed that the guns to be used would be the existing Mark 2 and 3 weapons, and through miscommunication, the Bureau of Construction and Repair assumed the ships would use a lighter design. As a result, the Mark 2 and 3 guns were not used for these, and the 16-inch/50 caliber Mark 7 gun was designed instead.[14] The Mark 2 and 3 guns were never placed on any ship.

Design

The 16-inch Mark 2 was 50 calibers long, with a liner, an A tube, jacket and seven hoops with four hoop locking rings and a screw box liner. The Mod 0 used an increasing twist in the rifling while the Mod 1 used a uniform twist and a different groove pattern. The Mark 3 was the same as the Mark 2 but used a one-step conical liner. The Mark 3 Mod 0 had an increasing rifling twist (like the Mark 2 Mod 0) while the Mark 3 Mod 1 utilized a uniform twist. At the time the program was cancelled, in 1922, 71 guns had been built, including the prototype, while another 44 were in progress.[15]

A Mark 3 Mod 1 was modified and used as the prototype for the 16-inch/50 caliber Mark 7 gun, which would go on to arm the Iowa-class battleships; it was redesignated as Mark D Mod 0.

Description

These built-up guns were 66inchesft8inchesin (ftin) long—50 times their 160NaN0 bore, or 50 calibers from breechface to muzzle. With a full powder charge of 700lb, the guns were capable of firing a 2110lb Mark 3 armor-piercing shell with a muzzle velocity of 2800ft/s firing out to an effective range of 44680yards. The Army used a reduced charge (672lb with Mark 3 shell or 648lb with Mark 12 shell) and either a 2110lb Mark 3 shell or a 2240lb Mark 12 shell, for a muzzle velocity of 2750ft/s with the Mark 3 or 2650ft/s with the Mark 12. The range for the Army version is listed as 45150yd but it is not clear which shell and charge this is for.[16]

Service

With war on the horizon, the Navy released the approximately 50 remaining guns, and on 27 July 1940, in the wake of the Fall of France, the Army's Harbor Defense Board recommended the construction of twenty-seven 16-inch two-gun batteries to protect strategic points along the US coastline, to be casemated against air attack, as was begun with almost all of the older batteries. The M2 through M5 barbette mounts were used for the later batteries.[17] As with the previous M1919 barbette carriage, these were designed with an elevation of 65 degrees to allow plunging fire as enemy ships approached.[13] About twenty-one 16-inch gun batteries were completed at eleven harbor defense commands in 1941–44, but not all of these were armed.[3]

Typical of this plan were the guns placed to protect Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island; two 16-inch guns in Battery Gray, Fort Church, Little Compton, Rhode Island, with two more in Battery Hamilton, Fort Greene, Point Judith, Narragansett, Rhode Island. A second battery of 16-inch guns at Fort Greene, Battery 109, had construction suspended in 1943 and never received guns. These batteries were placed such that they not only protected Narraganset Bay, but interdicted the main channels into Buzzards Bay and the east end of Long Island Sound.[18]

By late 1943, the threat of a naval attack on the United States had diminished, and with two or four 16-inch guns in most harbor defenses, construction and arming of further batteries was suspended. As 16-inch guns and a companion improved 6-inch gun were emplaced, older weapons were scrapped. With the war over in 1945, most of the remaining coast defense guns, including the recently emplaced 16-inch weapons, were scrapped by 1948.[19]

Surviving examples

All but four of these guns were scrapped by 1950.[20] One remaining piece is a Mark 3 (Bethlehem Steel No. 138) at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Aberdeen, Maryland, . Another is a Mark 2 (Naval Gun Factory No. 111) at the former Naval Gun Factory at the Washington Navy Yard, part of the Naval Historical Center museum collection. Two Mark 2 guns (Nos. 96 and 100) remain at the Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division, Dahlgren, Virginia.[21] Project HARP used some 16-inch, Mark II, Mod 1 barrels for high altitude projectile research. At least two of these barrels can be found at the abandoned Project HARP research site in Barbados, near the eastern end of Grantley Adams International Airport. Another complete HARP gun, made of two 16-inch barrels, is at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona. Another survivor is the Fort Miles 16 inch mark 2 guns.

See also

References

Bibliography

Journals

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: United States of America 16"/50 (40.6 cm) Mark 2 and Mark 3 . Navweaps . 16 February 2016 . 9 June 2016.
  2. Berhow, p. 61
  3. Berhow, p. 225
  4. Web site: Watervliet Arsenal Museum . 4 April 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090404030342/http://www.wva.army.mil/MUSEUM.HTM. 4 April 2009 .
  5. Web site: DiGiulian . Tony . 2008 . United States of America 16"/45 (40.6 cm) Mark 1 . 25 January 2015.
  6. Friedman Battleships, p. 137
  7. Friedman Battleships, pp. 154–165
  8. Friedman Cruisers, pp. 86–103
  9. Silverstone, p. xv.
  10. Web site: Navy Historical Center – Ship types: South Dakota Class . 3 September 2010. http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20100412213756/http%3A//www%2Ehistory%2Enavy%2Emil/photos/usnshtp/bb/bb49cl%2Ehtm. 12 April 2010 .
  11. Berhow, pp. 174–175, 224
  12. Miller, p. 109
  13. Ordnance, pp. 147–149
  14. Friedman Battleships, pp. 311–313
  15. Book: Naval Weapons of World War One . Seaforth Publishing . Friedman, Norman . 2011 . 158–159 . 978-1-84832-100-7.
  16. Berhow, p. 61
  17. Berhow, pp. 176–177
  18. Schroder, pp. 37–50
  19. Assistant Secretary of Defense, p. 55.
  20. Web site: 16-Inch Coast Defense Gun . 18 June 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928081927/http://www.ordmusfound.org/16ingun.html . 28 September 2007 .
  21. Web site: List of surviving US coast defense weapons at the Coast Defense Study Group . 20 October 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160418105553/http://cdsg.org/old/reprint%20PDFs/survive14.pdf . 18 April 2016 .