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QF 1-pounder pom-pom

The QF 1 pounder, universally known as the pom-pom due to the sound of its discharge,[9][10][11] was a 37 mm British autocannon, the first of its type in the world. It was used by several countries initially as an infantry gun and later as a light anti-aircraft gun.

QF 1 pdr Mark I & II ("pom-pom")
Mk II gun dated 1903, on anti-aircraft mounting, at the Imperial War Museum, London.[1]
TypeAutocannon
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Service history
In service1890s–1918
Used bySouth African Republic
British Empire
Khedivate of Egypt[2]
German Empire
Paraguay
Belgium
United States
Finland
Bolivia[3]
WarsMahdist War[4]
Spanish–American War
Second Boer War
1904 Paraguayan Revolution[5]
Herero Wars[6]
World War I
Finnish Civil War
Chaco War
Winter War
Production history
DesignerHiram Maxim
DesignedLate 1880s
ManufacturerMaxim-Nordenfelt
Vickers, Sons & Maxim
DWM
VariantsMk I, Mk II
Specifications
Mass410 pounds (186.0 kg) (gun & breech)
Length6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) (total)
Barrel length3 ft 7 in (1.09 m) (bore) L/29

Shell37 x 94R Common Shell
Shell weight1 lb (0.45 kg)
Calibre37-millimetre (1.457 in)
Barrels1
Actionautomatic, recoil
Rate of fire~300 rpm (cyclic)
Muzzle velocity1,800 ft/s (550 m/s)[7]
Maximum firing range4,500 yards (4,110 m) (Mk I+ on field carriage)[8]
Filling weight270 grains (17 g) black powder

History edit

Hiram Maxim originally designed the Pom-Pom in the late 1880s as an enlarged version of the Maxim machine gun. Its longer range necessitated exploding projectiles to judge range, which in turn dictated a shell weight of at least 400 grams (0.88 lb), as that was the lightest exploding shell allowed under the Saint Petersburg Declaration of 1868 and reaffirmed in the Hague Convention of 1899.[12]

Early versions were sold under the Maxim-Nordenfelt label, whereas versions in British service (i.e. from 1900) were labelled Vickers, Sons and Maxim (VSM) as Vickers had bought out Maxim-Nordenfelt in 1897 but they are the same gun.

Service by nation edit

Belgium edit

The Belgian Army used the gun on a high-angle field carriage mounting.[8]

Finland[13] edit

About 60 were built by Finnish company Ab H. Ahlberg & Co O during World War 1 for the Russian army, and when the Finnish civil war ended about half of these were still unfinished and thus remained in Finland. The White Army captured a total of 50 – 60 guns in the Civil War of 1918 . The guns used a column mount designed for naval use. It offered 360-degree traverse and about 70-degree elevation, allowing them to theoretically be used as antiaircraft-guns. The Finns managed to get over 30 of the captured guns to working order and they were used in warships and coastal artillery fortifications. Two of these guns also saw service in an armoured trains from 1918 to late 1930's. The weapon was never popular in Finnish use as it was unreliable and had quite a short range. Main reason for the short range was in 37 mm x 94R ammunition (with moderate muzzle velocity of only about 440 m/sec), which did not really have the ballistics needed for proper antiaircraft-use. The reliability of old fuses used in their high explosive shells also proved questionable. During World War 2 some of these guns were used in coastal artillery forts, where their unsuitability for anti-aircraft use became painfully obvious. However the guns proved somewhat reliable when fired with only low elevation. This was likely because shooting with low elevation did not stress their fabric ammunition belts as much as shooting with higher elevation. Their theoretical rate of fire was around 200 – 250 rounds per minute and maximum range around 4,400 meters. Finnish coastal defence decided to use them mainly as close range defence weapons of its coastal forts against surface targets and these old guns proved somewhat successful in this role. Still, since the coastal forts had rather limited number of anti-aircraft weapons, when needed these guns were also used against enemy aircraft. At least one plane was downed by such weapons; the Humaljoki Coastal Artillery Battery in Karelian Isthmus shot down a Soviet bomber with 37-mm Maxim automatic cannon in 25 of December 1939. By that time they were terribly outdated. So the last remaining 16 guns were scrapped soon after the Continuation War ended in 1944

Germany edit

 
German gunners wearing gasmasks, with Maxim Flak M14

A version was produced in Germany for both Navy and Army.[8]

In World War I, it was used in Europe as an anti-aircraft gun as the Maxim Flak M14. Four guns were used mounted on field carriages in the German South West Africa campaign in 1915, against South African forces.[14]

United Kingdom edit

South African War edit

 
Australian troopers with a captured 1-pounder in South Africa circa. 1901
 
Boer 1-pounder with shield

The British government initially rejected the gun but other countries bought it, including the South African Republic (Transvaal) government. In the Second Boer War, the British found themselves being fired on by the Boers with their 37 mm Maxim-Nordenfelt versions using ammunition made in Germany. The Boers' Maxim was also a large caliber, belt-fed, water-cooled machine gun that fired explosive rounds (smokeless ammunition) at 450 rounds per minute.[15]

Vickers-Maxim shipped either 57 or 50 guns out to the British Army in South Africa, with the first three arriving in time for the Battle of Paardeberg of February 1900.[16][17] These Mk I versions were mounted on typical field gun type carriages.

World War I edit

In World War I, it was used as an early anti-aircraft gun in the home defence of Britain. It was adapted as the Mk I*** and Mk II on high-angle pedestal mountings and deployed along London docks and on rooftops on key buildings in London, others mobile, on motor lorries at key towns in the East and Southeast of England. 25 were employed in August 1914, and 50 in February 1916.[18] A Mk II gun (now in the Imperial War Museum, London) on a Naval pedestal mounting was the first to open fire in defence of London during the war.[8] However, the shell was too small to damage the German Zeppelin airships sufficiently to bring them down.[19] The Ministry of Munitions noted in 1922: "The pom-poms were of very little value. There was no shrapnel available for them, and the shell provided for them would not burst on aeroplane fabric but fell back to earth as solid projectiles ... were of no use except at a much lower elevation than a Zeppelin attacking London was likely to keep".[20]

Lieutenant O. F. J. Hogg of No. 2 AA Section in III Corps was the first anti-aircraft gunner to shoot down an aircraft, with 75 rounds on 23 September 1914 in France.[21] The British Army did not employ it as an infantry weapon in World War I, as its shell was considered too small for use against any objects or fortifications and British doctrine relied on shrapnel fired by QF 13 pounder and 18-pounder field guns as its primary medium range anti-personnel weapon. The gun was experimentally mounted on aircraft as the lighter 1-pounder Mk III, the cancelled Vickers E.F.B.7 having been designed to carry it in its nose.[22] As a light anti-aircraft gun, it was quickly replaced by the larger QF 112 pounder and QF 2 pounder naval guns.

British ammunition edit

The British are reported to have initially used some common pointed shells (semi-armour piercing, with fuse in the shell base) in the Boer War, in addition to the standard common shell. The common pointed shell proved unsatisfactory, with the base fuse frequently working loose and falling out during flight.[17][23] In 1914, the cast-iron common shell and tracer were the only available rounds.[24]

United States edit

 
On USS Vixen, circa. 1898–1901

The U.S. Navy adopted the Maxim-Nordenfelt 37 mm 1-pounder as the 1-pounder Mark 6 before the 1898 Spanish–American War. The Mark 7, 9, 14, and 15 weapons were similar.[25] It was the first dedicated anti-aircraft (AA) gun adopted by the US Navy, specified as such on the Sampson-class destroyers launched in 1916–17. It was deployed on various types of ships during the US participation in World War I, although it was replaced as the standard AA gun on new destroyers by the 3 inch (76 mm)/23 caliber gun.

Previously, with the advent of the steel-hulled "New Navy" in 1884, some ships were equipped with the 1-pounder Hotchkiss revolving cannon.

In the aftermath of the Battle of Blair Mountain, the United States Army deployed artillery, including pompoms: "Their armament was strengthened with a howitzer and two pompoms."[26]

Rapid-firing (single shot, similar to non-automatic QF guns) 1-pounders were also used, including the Sponsell gun and eight other marks; the Mark 10 to be mounted on aircraft. Designs included Hotchkiss and Driggs-Schroeder. A semi-automatic weapon and a line throwing version were also adopted. Semi-automatic in this case meant a weapon in which the breech was opened and cartridge ejected automatically after firing, ready for manual loading of the next round.[25]

It is often difficult to determine from references whether "1-pounder RF" refers to single-shot, revolving cannon, or Maxim-Nordenfelt weapons.

Surviving examples edit

 
Devonport Park (2008)
 
Gun 543 mounted on field gun carriage, South African National Museum of Military History (2007)
 
An Uruguayan cañón automático Vickers-Maxim (foreground)

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ a b Imperial War Museum (2012). "1 pdr Vickers Gun Mk II". Imperial War Museum Collections Search. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  2. ^ Knight, Ian, British Infantryman vs Mahdist Warrior: Sudan 1884–98: Osprey Publishing (2021)
  3. ^ Huon, Jean (September 2013). "The Chaco War". Small Arms Review. Vol. 17, no. 3.
  4. ^ Encyclopedia of African colonial conflicts. Timothy J. Stapleton. Santa Barbara, Calif. 2017. ISBN 978-1-59884-837-3. OCLC 950611553.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ "La Revolucion Paraguaya de 1904".
  6. ^ "THE REVOLVERKANONE AND THE MASCHINENKANONE IN THE HERERO WAR".
  7. ^ "Handbook of the 1-PR. Q.F. Gun", 1902. Page 19, Range Table for British Mk I gun. Muzzle Velocity of 1,800 ft/second, firing 1-pound projectile with 1 oz 90 grains Cordite.
  8. ^ a b c d Hogg & Thurston 1972, pp. 22–23
  9. ^ The Waverley pictorial dictionary (Volume SIX). London: Waverley Book Co. p. 3335.
  10. ^ . Australian Boer War Memorial Committee. Archived from the original on 19 July 2008. Retrieved 28 August 2008.
  11. ^ "...my paper strength will be 2,400 mounted men, 6 guns, and 8 pom-poms". Brigadier Henry Rawlinson, 2 January 1902, in South Africa. From "The Life of General Lord Rawlinson of Trent", by Sir Frederick Maurice. London: Cassell, 1928
  12. ^ Hogg & Thurston 1972, p. 22, state the Hague Convention dictated the 1 lb (0.45 kg) shell; however 400 grams was set as the minimum for exploding shells by Laws of War: Declaration of St. Petersburg; 29 November 1868
  13. ^ "FINNISH ARMY 1918–1945: ANTIAIRCRAFT GUNS PART 2". www.jaegerplatoon.net. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  14. ^ Major D.D. Hall, The South African Military History Society Military History Journal – Vol 3 No 2, December 1974. "GERMAN GUNS OF WORLD WAR I IN SOUTH AFRICA". Major Hall states that these guns were made by Krupp, but the 2 captured guns in the South African Military History Museum were made by Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken (DWM)
  15. ^ http://www.smallarmsreview.com/display.article.cfm?idarticles=2490, SOUTH AFRICA’S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF MILITARY HISTORY
  16. ^ 'The Times History of the War in South Africa' mentions 57; Headlam 'The History of the Royal Artillery' only mentions 50.
  17. ^ a b Fiona Barbour, The South African Military History Society Military History Journal – Vol 3 No 1 June 1974. Mystery Shell
  18. ^ Farndale 1988, pp. 362–363
  19. ^ Routledge 1994, p. 7–8
  20. ^ Official History of the Ministry of Munitions 1922, Volume X, Part 6, pp. 24–25. Facsimile reprint by Imperial War Museum and Naval & Military Press 2008. ISBN 1-84734-884-X
  21. ^ Routledge 1994, p. 5
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  23. ^ The British 1902 manual listed only the Common Shell as currently produced: "A number of steel shells have been issued, but no more will be provided": "Handbook of the 1-PR. Q.F. Gun", 1902. Page 18
  24. ^ Treatise on Ammunition 10th Edition, 1915. War Office, UK
  25. ^ a b DiGiulian, Tony, United States of America 1-pdr (0.45 kg) 1.46" (37 mm) Marks 1 through 15
  26. ^ Lon Savage (1990), Thunder in the Mountains: The West Virginia Mine War, 1920–21, rev. edition, Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh, Ch. 24, "'The Miners Have Withdrawn Their Lines'", p.151.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 November 2011. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  28. ^ "Cañón Hotchkiss de 37 mm utilizado en cruceros de fines del siglo XIX, conservado en el Museo Marítimo Nacional, Valparaíso". Repositorioarchivohistorico.armada.cl. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
  29. ^ Guns in the Anti-aircraft Museum (in Finnish)

Bibliography edit

  • "Handbook of the 1-PR. Q.F. Gun (Mounted on Field Carriage)" War Office, UK, 1902. 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • General Sir Martin Farndale, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: The Forgotten Fronts and the Home Base, 1914–18. London: Royal Artillery Institution, 1988. ISBN 1-870114-05-1
  • I.V. Hogg & L.F. Thurston, British Artillery Weapons & Ammunition 1914–1918. London: Ian Allan, 1972. ISBN 978-0-7110-0381-1
  • Brigadier N.W. Routledge, History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery: Anti-Aircraft Artillery, 1914–55. London: Brassey's, 1994. ISBN 1-85753-099-3

External links edit

  • Handbook for the 1-pr. Q. F. gun, mounted on field carriage, 1902 at State Library of Victoria
  • Anthony G Williams, 37MM AND 40MM GUNS IN BRITISH SERVICE 3 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Diagram of 1pr. Q.F. Mark I Land carriage at Victorian Forts and Artillery website
  • Diagram of 1pr. Q.F. Mark II Land carriage at Victorian Forts and Artillery website
  • DiGiulian, Tony Navweaps.com US Navy 1 pounder

pounder, confused, with, pounder, naval, also, known, pounder, universally, known, sound, discharge, british, autocannon, first, type, world, used, several, countries, initially, infantry, later, light, anti, aircraft, mark, dated, 1903, anti, aircraft, mounti. Not to be confused with the QF 2 pounder naval gun also known as the pom pom The QF 1 pounder universally known as the pom pom due to the sound of its discharge 9 10 11 was a 37 mm British autocannon the first of its type in the world It was used by several countries initially as an infantry gun and later as a light anti aircraft gun QF 1 pdr Mark I amp II pom pom Mk II gun dated 1903 on anti aircraft mounting at the Imperial War Museum London 1 TypeAutocannonPlace of originUnited KingdomService historyIn service1890s 1918Used bySouth African RepublicBritish EmpireKhedivate of Egypt 2 German EmpireParaguayBelgiumUnited StatesFinlandBolivia 3 WarsMahdist War 4 Spanish American WarSecond Boer War1904 Paraguayan Revolution 5 Herero Wars 6 World War IFinnish Civil WarChaco WarWinter WarProduction historyDesignerHiram MaximDesignedLate 1880sManufacturerMaxim NordenfeltVickers Sons amp MaximDWMVariantsMk I Mk IISpecificationsMass410 pounds 186 0 kg gun amp breech Length6 ft 1 in 1 85 m total Barrel length3 ft 7 in 1 09 m bore L 29Shell37 x 94R Common ShellShell weight1 lb 0 45 kg Calibre37 millimetre 1 457 in Barrels1Actionautomatic recoilRate of fire 300 rpm cyclic Muzzle velocity1 800 ft s 550 m s 7 Maximum firing range4 500 yards 4 110 m Mk I on field carriage 8 Filling weight270 grains 17 g black powder Contents 1 History 2 Service by nation 2 1 Belgium 2 2 Finland 13 2 3 Germany 2 4 United Kingdom 2 4 1 South African War 2 4 2 World War I 2 4 3 British ammunition 2 5 United States 3 Surviving examples 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editHiram Maxim originally designed the Pom Pom in the late 1880s as an enlarged version of the Maxim machine gun Its longer range necessitated exploding projectiles to judge range which in turn dictated a shell weight of at least 400 grams 0 88 lb as that was the lightest exploding shell allowed under the Saint Petersburg Declaration of 1868 and reaffirmed in the Hague Convention of 1899 12 Early versions were sold under the Maxim Nordenfelt label whereas versions in British service i e from 1900 were labelled Vickers Sons and Maxim VSM as Vickers had bought out Maxim Nordenfelt in 1897 but they are the same gun Service by nation editBelgium edit The Belgian Army used the gun on a high angle field carriage mounting 8 This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Finland 13 edit About 60 were built by Finnish company Ab H Ahlberg amp Co O during World War 1 for the Russian army and when the Finnish civil war ended about half of these were still unfinished and thus remained in Finland The White Army captured a total of 50 60 guns in the Civil War of 1918 The guns used a column mount designed for naval use It offered 360 degree traverse and about 70 degree elevation allowing them to theoretically be used as antiaircraft guns The Finns managed to get over 30 of the captured guns to working order and they were used in warships and coastal artillery fortifications Two of these guns also saw service in an armoured trains from 1918 to late 1930 s The weapon was never popular in Finnish use as it was unreliable and had quite a short range Main reason for the short range was in 37 mm x 94R ammunition with moderate muzzle velocity of only about 440 m sec which did not really have the ballistics needed for proper antiaircraft use The reliability of old fuses used in their high explosive shells also proved questionable During World War 2 some of these guns were used in coastal artillery forts where their unsuitability for anti aircraft use became painfully obvious However the guns proved somewhat reliable when fired with only low elevation This was likely because shooting with low elevation did not stress their fabric ammunition belts as much as shooting with higher elevation Their theoretical rate of fire was around 200 250 rounds per minute and maximum range around 4 400 meters Finnish coastal defence decided to use them mainly as close range defence weapons of its coastal forts against surface targets and these old guns proved somewhat successful in this role Still since the coastal forts had rather limited number of anti aircraft weapons when needed these guns were also used against enemy aircraft At least one plane was downed by such weapons the Humaljoki Coastal Artillery Battery in Karelian Isthmus shot down a Soviet bomber with 37 mm Maxim automatic cannon in 25 of December 1939 By that time they were terribly outdated So the last remaining 16 guns were scrapped soon after the Continuation War ended in 1944 Germany edit nbsp German gunners wearing gasmasks with Maxim Flak M14A version was produced in Germany for both Navy and Army 8 In World War I it was used in Europe as an anti aircraft gun as the Maxim Flak M14 Four guns were used mounted on field carriages in the German South West Africa campaign in 1915 against South African forces 14 United Kingdom edit South African War edit nbsp Australian troopers with a captured 1 pounder in South Africa circa 1901 nbsp Boer 1 pounder with shieldThe British government initially rejected the gun but other countries bought it including the South African Republic Transvaal government In the Second Boer War the British found themselves being fired on by the Boers with their 37 mm Maxim Nordenfelt versions using ammunition made in Germany The Boers Maxim was also a large caliber belt fed water cooled machine gun that fired explosive rounds smokeless ammunition at 450 rounds per minute 15 Vickers Maxim shipped either 57 or 50 guns out to the British Army in South Africa with the first three arriving in time for the Battle of Paardeberg of February 1900 16 17 These Mk I versions were mounted on typical field gun type carriages World War I edit In World War I it was used as an early anti aircraft gun in the home defence of Britain It was adapted as the Mk I and Mk II on high angle pedestal mountings and deployed along London docks and on rooftops on key buildings in London others mobile on motor lorries at key towns in the East and Southeast of England 25 were employed in August 1914 and 50 in February 1916 18 A Mk II gun now in the Imperial War Museum London on a Naval pedestal mounting was the first to open fire in defence of London during the war 8 However the shell was too small to damage the German Zeppelin airships sufficiently to bring them down 19 The Ministry of Munitions noted in 1922 The pom poms were of very little value There was no shrapnel available for them and the shell provided for them would not burst on aeroplane fabric but fell back to earth as solid projectiles were of no use except at a much lower elevation than a Zeppelin attacking London was likely to keep 20 Lieutenant O F J Hogg of No 2 AA Section in III Corps was the first anti aircraft gunner to shoot down an aircraft with 75 rounds on 23 September 1914 in France 21 The British Army did not employ it as an infantry weapon in World War I as its shell was considered too small for use against any objects or fortifications and British doctrine relied on shrapnel fired by QF 13 pounder and 18 pounder field guns as its primary medium range anti personnel weapon The gun was experimentally mounted on aircraft as the lighter 1 pounder Mk III the cancelled Vickers E F B 7 having been designed to carry it in its nose 22 As a light anti aircraft gun it was quickly replaced by the larger QF 11 2 pounder and QF 2 pounder naval guns British ammunition edit The British are reported to have initially used some common pointed shells semi armour piercing with fuse in the shell base in the Boer War in addition to the standard common shell The common pointed shell proved unsatisfactory with the base fuse frequently working loose and falling out during flight 17 23 In 1914 the cast iron common shell and tracer were the only available rounds 24 nbsp Mk I Steel shell 1902 nbsp Mk II explosive Common shell amp Mk I tracer round 1914United States edit nbsp On USS Vixen circa 1898 1901The U S Navy adopted the Maxim Nordenfelt 37 mm 1 pounder as the 1 pounder Mark 6 before the 1898 Spanish American War The Mark 7 9 14 and 15 weapons were similar 25 It was the first dedicated anti aircraft AA gun adopted by the US Navy specified as such on the Sampson class destroyers launched in 1916 17 It was deployed on various types of ships during the US participation in World War I although it was replaced as the standard AA gun on new destroyers by the 3 inch 76 mm 23 caliber gun Previously with the advent of the steel hulled New Navy in 1884 some ships were equipped with the 1 pounder Hotchkiss revolving cannon In the aftermath of the Battle of Blair Mountain the United States Army deployed artillery including pompoms Their armament was strengthened with a howitzer and two pompoms 26 Rapid firing single shot similar to non automatic QF guns 1 pounders were also used including the Sponsell gun and eight other marks the Mark 10 to be mounted on aircraft Designs included Hotchkiss and Driggs Schroeder A semi automatic weapon and a line throwing version were also adopted Semi automatic in this case meant a weapon in which the breech was opened and cartridge ejected automatically after firing ready for manual loading of the next round 25 It is often difficult to determine from references whether 1 pounder RF refers to single shot revolving cannon or Maxim Nordenfelt weapons Surviving examples edit nbsp Devonport Park 2008 nbsp Gun 543 mounted on field gun carriage South African National Museum of Military History 2007 nbsp An Uruguayan canon automatico Vickers Maxim foreground A gun from 1903 at the Imperial War Museum London 1 Two German manufactured 1903 guns used during World War I are on display at the South African National Museum of Military History Johannesburg Nr 542 and 543 from the Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken A German manufactured gun in the Wehrtechnische Studiensammlung Koblenz Germany 27 A gun in Bridgton Maine An early Maxim Nordenfelt gun no 2024 is currently on display the American Heritage Museum in Stow Massachusetts A gun in the Canadian War Museum A gun in the Museo Naval y Maritimo Valparaiso Chile 28 A gun at the War Museum in Newport News Va still on field mount Flak M14 A gun at the Royal Danish Arsenal Museum in Copenhagen Denmark A gun at Istanbul Navy Muzeum 40 ItK 15 V Vickers in the Finnish Ilmatorjuntamuseo Anti Aircraft Museum in Tuusula 29 A gun at Fortaleza del Cerro UruguaySee also editCOW 37 mm gun List of anti aircraft guns List of infantry gunsNotes and references edit a b Imperial War Museum 2012 1 pdr Vickers Gun Mk II Imperial War Museum Collections Search Retrieved 18 February 2012 Knight Ian British Infantryman vs Mahdist Warrior Sudan 1884 98 Osprey Publishing 2021 Huon Jean September 2013 The Chaco War Small Arms Review Vol 17 no 3 Encyclopedia of African colonial conflicts Timothy J Stapleton Santa Barbara Calif 2017 ISBN 978 1 59884 837 3 OCLC 950611553 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint others link La Revolucion Paraguaya de 1904 THE REVOLVERKANONE AND THE MASCHINENKANONE IN THE HERERO WAR Handbook of the 1 PR Q F Gun 1902 Page 19 Range Table for British Mk I gun Muzzle Velocity of 1 800 ft second firing 1 pound projectile with 1 oz 90 grains Cordite a b c d Hogg amp Thurston 1972 pp 22 23 The Waverley pictorial dictionary Volume SIX London Waverley Book Co p 3335 Weapons Australian Boer War Memorial Committee Archived from the original on 19 July 2008 Retrieved 28 August 2008 my paper strength will be 2 400 mounted men 6 guns and 8 pom poms Brigadier Henry Rawlinson 2 January 1902 in South Africa From The Life of General Lord Rawlinson of Trent by Sir Frederick Maurice London Cassell 1928 Hogg amp Thurston 1972 p 22 state the Hague Convention dictated the 1 lb 0 45 kg shell however 400 grams was set as the minimum for exploding shells by Laws of War Declaration of St Petersburg 29 November 1868 FINNISH ARMY 1918 1945 ANTIAIRCRAFT GUNS PART 2 www jaegerplatoon net Retrieved 21 September 2022 Major D D Hall The South African Military History Society Military History Journal Vol 3 No 2 December 1974 GERMAN GUNS OF WORLD WAR I IN SOUTH AFRICA Major Hall states that these guns were made by Krupp but the 2 captured guns in the South African Military History Museum were made by Deutsche Waffen und Munitionsfabriken DWM http www smallarmsreview com display article cfm idarticles 2490 SOUTH AFRICA S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF MILITARY HISTORY The Times History of the War in South Africa mentions 57 Headlam The History of the Royal Artillery only mentions 50 a b Fiona Barbour The South African Military History Society Military History Journal Vol 3 No 1 June 1974 Mystery Shell Farndale 1988 pp 362 363 Routledge 1994 p 7 8 Official History of the Ministry of Munitions 1922 Volume X Part 6 pp 24 25 Facsimile reprint by Imperial War Museum and Naval amp Military Press 2008 ISBN 1 84734 884 X Routledge 1994 p 5 THE CANNON PIONEERS The early development and use of aircraft cannon by Anthony G Williams Archived from the original on 29 September 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2014 The British 1902 manual listed only the Common Shell as currently produced A number of steel shells have been issued but no more will be provided Handbook of the 1 PR Q F Gun 1902 Page 18 Treatise on Ammunition 10th Edition 1915 War Office UK a b DiGiulian Tony United States of America 1 pdr 0 45 kg 1 46 37 mm Marks 1 through 15 Lon Savage 1990 Thunder in the Mountains The West Virginia Mine War 1920 21 rev edition Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Ch 24 The Miners Have Withdrawn Their Lines p 151 Bundesamt fur Wehrtechnik und Beschaffung Archived from the original on 8 November 2011 Retrieved 28 October 2011 Canon Hotchkiss de 37 mm utilizado en cruceros de fines del siglo XIX conservado en el Museo Maritimo Nacional Valparaiso Repositorioarchivohistorico armada cl Retrieved 10 August 2021 Guns in the Anti aircraft Museum in Finnish Bibliography edit Handbook of the 1 PR Q F Gun Mounted on Field Carriage War Office UK 1902 Archived 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine General Sir Martin Farndale History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery The Forgotten Fronts and the Home Base 1914 18 London Royal Artillery Institution 1988 ISBN 1 870114 05 1 I V Hogg amp L F Thurston British Artillery Weapons amp Ammunition 1914 1918 London Ian Allan 1972 ISBN 978 0 7110 0381 1 Brigadier N W Routledge History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery Anti Aircraft Artillery 1914 55 London Brassey s 1994 ISBN 1 85753 099 3External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to QF 1 pounder pom pom Handbook for the 1 pr Q F gun mounted on field carriage 1902 at State Library of Victoria Anthony G Williams 37MM AND 40MM GUNS IN BRITISH SERVICE Archived 3 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine Diagram of 1pr Q F Mark I Land carriage at Victorian Forts and Artillery website Diagram of 1pr Q F Mark II Land carriage at Victorian Forts and Artillery website DiGiulian Tony Navweaps com US Navy 1 pounder Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title QF 1 pounder pom pom amp oldid 1195211516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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