Canon de 305 mm Modèle 1893/96 gun

Canon de 305 mm Modèle 1893/96

Forward turret on Suffren
Type naval gun
Place of origin  France
Service history
Used by  France
Wars First World War
Specifications
Weight 48 tonnes (47 long tons; 53 short tons)
Barrel length about 12.2 metres (40 ft)

Shell separate-loading, bag charge
Shell weight 349 kilograms (769 lb)
Calibre 305 millimetres (12.0 in)
Breech Welin interrrupted-screw breech
Recoil hydro-pneumatic
Elevation -5°? to +15°
Traverse depended on mount
Rate of fire 1 rpm
Muzzle velocity 780 metres per second (2,600 ft/s)
Maximum firing range 12,000 metres (13,000 yd)

The Canon de 305 mm Modèle 1893/96 was a heavy naval gun used as the main armament of a number of French pre-dreadnoughts during World War I. It equipped the Charlemagne, République and Liberté-class battleships as well as the unique battleships Iéna and Suffren. It was also used as railway artillery in that war.

Description

The 12-inch/40 calibre Canon de 305 mm Modèle 1893/96 gun was a typical built-up French heavy gun of its period. It used a Welin interrupted-screw breech and bagged propellant with a de Bange obturator to get a good gas seal during firing.[1] It was mounted in twin-gun turrets which had a couple of unusual features. First, most of the turret's operating machinery was housed inside the turret, with only an armored tube to protect the ammunition hoists. This made little difference in the overall weight of the turret, but did raise the machinery higher in the ship than the turrets of other nations, which did have implications for stability. Secondly, they used a hydraulic pivot to lift the turret when it rotated; this was lowered onto a seating ring when the turret was in the proper position to fire. Each turret had a nominal 300° of traverse, although each ship had its own specific limitations.[2]

World War I railway gun

Railway gun on centre-pintle mounting circa. 1917

During World War I surplus Modèle 1893/1896 guns were mounted on both rotating centre-pintle (Batignolles) and sliding-carriage mountings on railway carriages to provide mobile firepower on the Western Front. They fired shells weighing from 321–351 kilograms (708–774 lb) to a maximum range of 31,130 metres (34,040 yd). The railroad mounts had a maximum elevation of 40° which accounts for the extra range over the naval guns.[1]

See also

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era

Notes

References

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