RML 40-pounder gun explained

RML 40-pounder gun
Origin:United Kingdom
Type:Heavy field gun
Fortification gun
Is Artillery:yes
Is Ranged:yes
Is Explosive:yes
Is Uk:yes
Used By:British Empire
Design Date:Mk I : 1871
Mk II : 1874
Weight:Mk I (34cwt) : 3808lb
Mk II (35cwt) : 3920lb
Part Length:Mk I : 85.5inches bore (18 calibres)
Mk II : 104.5inches bore (22 calibres)
Cartridge:40lb[1]
Caliber:4.75inches
Action:RML
Velocity:Mk II : 1425ft/s[2]

The RML 40-pounder gun was a British rifled muzzle-loading siege and fortification gun designed in 1871. It was intended to supersede the RBL 40-pounder Armstrong gun[3] after the British military reverted to rifled muzzle-loading artillery until a more satisfactory breech-loading system than that of the Armstrong guns was developed.

Description

The original Mk I short barrel of 18 calibres suffered from irregular velocity and hence accuracy, due to incomplete burning of the powder charge, hence only 20 were built.

The Mark II of 1874 with barrel lengthened to 22 calibres solved this problem and became the definitive model.[4]

The gun consisted of a central toughened steel "A" tube surrounded by wrought-iron coils, with a trunnion ring and cascabel. Rifling was the "Woolwich" pattern of three broad grooves, with a uniform twist of 1 turn in 35 calibres (i.e. in 166.25 inches).[5]

Service use

Four 40-pounders were used during the defence of Kandahar, during the 2nd Anglo-Afghan War in 1880.[6] Ten 40-pounder RML guns were landed in Egypt in 1882 as part of a Royal Artillery Siege train formed for the Anglo-Egyptian War, however none of them were deployed in action.[7]

The guns were also deployed at Forts and Batteries around Great Britain to form part of the fixed defences. In some cases special overbank carriages were issued for this use. They remained in this role until 1902, by which time most had been dismounted and scrapped.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Text Book of Gunnery 1887, Table XVI, Page 313.
  2. 1425ft/s firing a 40lb projectile with 7lb of R.L.G.² powder. Text Book of Gunnery 1887, Table XVI, Page 313.
  3. Treatise on the Construction and Manufacture of Ordnance in the British Service, 1877, Page 260.
  4. Treatise on the Construction and Manufacture of Ordnance in the British Service, 1877, Page 260.
  5. Text Book of Gunnery 1887, Table XVI, Page 312.
  6. T A Heathcote (1974). The Indian Army, Newton Abbott, David and Charles, p181.
  7. Goodrich, Caspar F (Lt Cdr), Report of the British Naval and Military Operations in Egypt 1882, Navy Department, Washington, 1885, p.231