8-inch Mk. VI railway gun explained

8-inch Mk.VI M3A2 railway gun
Origin:United States
Type:Railway gun
Is Artillery:yes
Is Ranged:yes
Is Explosive:yes
Service:1941–1946
Used By:United States
Wars:World War II
Manufacturer:Baldwin Locomotive Works (railway carriage)
Production Date:1941
Number:32? railway version, 16 fixed barbette mounts
Weight:tube and breech: 42000lb
complete railway mount: 188000lb
Length:tube and breech: 30feet
Cartridge:separate loading HE and AP,
260lb AP
Caliber:8 inches (203 mm)
Rate:2 rounds a minute
Velocity:2750ft/s AP, or 2840ft/s HE.
Max Range:35300yd
Feed:hand
Breech:Interrupted screw, step cut (Welin type)
Recoil:Hydro-pneumatic
Carriage:M1A1 railway
Elevation:45 degrees
Traverse:360 degrees

The 8-inch Navy gun Mk.VI M3A2 on railway mount M1A1 was a World War II improved replacement for the World War I-era 8-inch (203 mm) M1888 gun and was used by the US Army's Coast Artillery Corps in US harbor defenses. The guns were also mounted in fixed emplacements on the barbette carriage M1A1. These guns were US Navy surplus 8"/45 caliber guns from battleships scrapped under the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty. Mark VI (also Mark 6) was the Navy designation. The Army designation for this gun was "8-inch Navy gun Mk.VI M3A2".

History

The ex-Navy Mark VI railway gun was quickly put together at the start of World War II, to supplement the older World War I 8-inch M1888 railway gun. It was developed from an experimental 12-inch (305 mm) railway howitzer carriage of World War I. The all-around rotating mount and outriggers were designed to allow the gun to track a moving target for coast defense. These guns had a very short life in Army use, entering service in February 1941 and being cut up for scrap immediately after the war. The guns were the Navy's 8-inch (203 mm)/45 caliber Mark VI, and were originally secondary armament on Virginia- and Connecticut-class battleships launched 1904-06 and scrapped in the 1920s.[1] They were mounted in both fixed emplacements and on the M1A1 railway carriage.

Deployment

Sighting and fire control equipment

The following sighting equipment was used with the gun.

Support cars

Surviving Examples

Four weapons of this type survive:[4]

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: USA 8"/45 (20.3 cm) Mark 6. NavWeaps.com.
  2. http://cdsg.org/wp-content/uploads/pdfs/FORTS/CACunits/CACreg1.pdf Gaines, William C., Coast Artillery Organizational History, 1917-1950, Coast Defense Journal, vol. 23, issue 2, pp. 6-8, 25-27
  3. Web site: FT 8-I-1 Firing tables. Gene Slovers US Navy Pages.
  4. Berhow 2004, p. 234
  5. Web site: Railway Batteries. FortMiles.org. 2012-11-07. https://web.archive.org/web/20180928210408/http://www.fortmiles.org/intel/firepower/batteries/batt2021.html. 2018-09-28. dead.