fbpx
Wikipedia

5-inch/38-caliber gun

The Mark 12 5"/38 caliber gun was a United States dual-purpose naval gun, but also installed in single-purpose mounts on a handful of ships. The 38 caliber barrel was a mid-length compromise between the previous United States standard 5"/51 low-angle gun and 5"/25 anti-aircraft gun. United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile 5 inches (127 mm) in diameter, and the barrel was 38 calibers long. The increased barrel length provided greatly improved performance in both anti-aircraft and anti-surface roles compared to the 5"/25 gun. However, except for the barrel length and the use of semi-fixed ammunition, the 5"/38 gun was derived from the 5"/25 gun. Both weapons had power ramming, which enabled rapid fire at high angles against aircraft. The 5"/38 entered service on USS Farragut, commissioned in 1934, the first new destroyer design since the last Clemson was built in 1922. The base ring mount, which improved the effective rate of fire, entered service on USS Porter, commissioned in 1936.[2][3]

5"/38 caliber gun
Two Mk 30 single enclosed base ring mounts on USS David W. Taylor
TypeDeck gun
Place of originUnited States
Service history
In service1934-2008
Used byUnited States Navy, United States Coast Guard, Royal Navy, Danish Navy, Italian Navy, Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, South Vietnamese Navy, and every navy that bought surplus World War II, US Navy warships
WarsWorld War II, Korean War, Vietnam War, Gulf War, Falklands War, and wars that involved navies who bought surplus World War II, US Navy warships
Production history
Designed1931-1932
Specifications
MassMk 12 Gun Assembly: 3,990 lb (1,810 kg). Mounts varied from 29,260 lb (13,270 kg) to 170,653 lb (77,407 kg)
LengthMk 12 Gun Assembly: 223.8 in (5.68 m)
Barrel length190 in (4.83 m) bore, 157.2 in (3.99 m) rifling
CrewVaried on mount type

Shell127×680mmR[1]
53 to 55 lb (24 to 25 kg)
Caliber5 in (127 mm)
BreechVertical sliding-wedge
Recoil15 in (38 cm)
Elevation−15° to +85°
Traverse328.5 degrees
Rate of fireDesign: 15 rpm
Muzzle velocity2,600 ft/s (790 m/s) initial
SightsOptical telescope

Among naval historians, the 5"/38 gun is considered the best intermediate-caliber,[4] dual purpose naval gun of World War II,[5] especially as it was usually under the control of the advanced Mark 37 Gun Fire Control System which provided accurate and timely firing against surface and air targets. Even this advanced system required nearly 1000 rounds of ammunition expenditure per aircraft kill.[6] However, the planes were normally killed by shell fragments and not direct hits; barrage fire was used, with many guns firing in the air at the same time. This would result in large walls of shell fragments being put up to take out one or several planes or in anticipation of an unseen plane, this being justifiable as one plane was capable of significant destruction. The comparatively high rate of fire for a gun of its caliber earned it an enviable reputation, particularly as an anti-aircraft weapon, in which role it was commonly employed by United States Navy vessels. Base ring mounts with integral hoists had a nominal rate of fire of 15 rounds per minute per barrel; however, with a well-trained crew, 22 rounds per minute per barrel was possible for short periods.[5] On pedestal and other mounts lacking integral hoists, 12 to 15 rounds per minute was the rate of fire.[7] Useful life expectancy was 4600 effective full charges (EFC) per barrel.[8]

The 5"/38 cal gun was mounted on a very large number of US Navy ships in the World War II era. It was backfitted to many of the World War I-era battleships during their wartime refits, usually replacing 5"/25 guns that were fitted in the 1930s. It has left active US Navy service, but it is still on mothballed ships of the United States Navy reserve fleets. It is also used by a number of nations who bought or were given US Navy surplus ships. Millions of rounds of ammunition were produced for these guns, with over 720,000 rounds still remaining in Navy storage depots in the mid-1980s because of the large number of Reserve Fleet ships with 5"/38 cal guns on board.

Mark 12 5"/38 cal gun assembly Edit

 
Mk 12 gun assembly

Each mount carries one or two Mk 12 5"/38cal Gun Assemblies. The gun assembly shown is used in single mounts, and it is the right gun in twin mounts. It is loaded from the left side. The left gun in twin mounts is the mirror image of the right gun, and it is loaded from the right side. The Mk12 gun assembly weighs 3,990 lb (1,810 kg).[2] The Mark 12 Gun Assembly was introduced in 1934, where it was first used in single pedestal mounts on the Farragut-class destroyers,[9] but by the time of World War II they had been installed in single and twin mounts on nearly every major warship and auxiliary in the US fleet.[2]

Characteristics Edit

The major Mk12 Gun Assembly characteristics are:[5]: 158 [2]

Semi-automatic
During recoil, some of the recoil energy is stored in the counter-recoil system. That stored energy is used during counter-recoil to prepare the gun for the next round. The firing pin is cocked, the breech is opened, the spent propellant case is ejected, and the bore is cleared of debris with an air blast.
Hand loaded
A projectile-man and a powder-man are stationed at each gun assembly. Their job is to move the round, consisting of a projectile and a propellant case, from the hoists to the rammer tray projecting from the gun's breech, and then start the ram cycle. The powder case is placed first and the projectile rests against the powder case.
 
Vertical Sliding Wedge Breech Block.
Power rammed
This gun used a 7.5 hp (5.6 kW) electric-hydraulic power rammer that was designed to ram a 93-pound (42 kg), 47.5 in-long (1.21 m) round (combined weight of projectile and propellant) into the chamber at any gun elevation in less than one second.[5]: 172  The rammer's control box, hydraulic fluid tank and AC motor are bolted to the top of the slide (see the Gun Assembly picture above). The hydraulically driven rammer spade, called the power spade in that picture, is at the back of the rammer tray. If the multiple names of the "spade" are confusing, look at this footnote.[10] Hand ramming was also possible in case of power failures with rate of fire approximately cut in half.[11]
Vertical sliding-wedge breech block (see drawing)
The breech block closes the chamber behind the propellant case. It also contains the firing pin assembly.
Hydraulic recoil
Two hydraulic pistons in the housing absorb the major shock of recoil as the housing moves back inside the slide (see picture). They also buffer the end of counter-recoil for a soft return to battery.
 
Drawing of the recoil and counter-recoil systems. The arrow shows the motion of the housing in the slide during recoil.
Pneumatic counter-recoil
At the end of recoil, the counter-recoil system moves the housing forward again until it is back "in battery," and holds it there at any gun elevation. A chamber in the housing is filled with compressed air. At the rear of this chamber is a 3.5 in (8.9 cm) cylindrical hole with a chevron packing. [5]: 161  Projecting through the hole is a movable piston that abuts the back of the slide (see picture). The air pressure in the chamber attempts to push the piston out of the chamber, but the piston can't move because of the slide. Therefore, since the piston can't go backwards, the air pressure in the chamber forces the housing forward. When the gun is in battery, the pressure in this chamber is about 1,500 psi (10 MPa). During recoil, the pressure rises to about 2,250 psi (15.5 MPa).[5]: 162 
Barrel designation (5"/38 Caliber)
  • 5" is the caliber of this gun. The term "caliber" used here is the artillery caliber definition, and its value is equal to the bore diameter as measured from land to land.[5]: 81  Lands are the raised portions of the bore rifling, between the grooves.[5]: 81  (note: artillery caliber and small arms caliber are not the same).
  • 38 caliber means that the barrel from breech face to muzzle is 38 calibers in length.[5]: 81  As this gun's caliber is 5 inches (127mm), its barrel length is 38 times 5 inches: 190 inches (480 cm; 16 ft).
Barrel description [5]: 160 
  • Radially expanded monobloc steel alloy.
  • Weight: 2,000 pounds (910 kilograms)
  • The bore is chrome plated from the origin of rifling (forward end of the chamber) to the muzzle.
  • 45 groove rifling with a full uniform right hand twist in 30 Calibers (150 inches (380 centimetres)).
  • Maximum bore pressure of a new gun firing an anti-aircraft common projectile: 40,320 pounds per square inch (278,000 kilopascals). [5]: 34 
  • Barrel connected to the housing with a bayonet joint that allowed for its replacement by destroyer tenders in the theater of operation, without dismantling the breech mechanism or other parts.[2]
Ballistics
Maximum horizontal range with a 55-pound (25 kg) projectile is 18,000 yards (16,000 m).[5]: 159  In the anti-aircraft role, the gun has a ceiling of 37,200 feet (11,300 m) at 85 degrees elevation.[5]: 159 
Armor penetration with 54-pound (24 kg) special common shell[2]
5.0" (127 mm) belt armor at 4,000 yards (3,700 m)
4.0" (102 mm) at 5,400 yards (4,900 m)
3.0" (76 mm) at 7,400 yards (6,800 m)
2.0" (51 mm) at 11,000 yards (10,000 m)
1.0" (25 mm) deck armor at 13,800 yards (12,600 m)
with 55.18 pounds (25.03 kg) AA common shell: 1.5 inches (38 mm) at 10,000 yards (9,100 m)
Range with 55.18-pound (25.03 kg) AAC Mark 49 (792 mps)[2]
10° 9,506 yards (8,692 m)
15° 11,663 yards (10,665 m)
20° 13,395 yards (12,248 m)
25° 14,804 yards (13,537 m)
30° 15,919 yards (14,556 m)
35° 16,739 yards (15,306 m)
40° 17,240 yards (15,760 m)
45° 17,392 yards (15,903 m)
AA Ceiling 37,200 feet (11,300 m)

The new gun initial muzzle velocity is 2,600 feet per second (790 metres per second), and the gun life average initial muzzle velocity is about 2,500 feet per second (760 metres per second)[2].

US ships during World War II carried only small quantities of special common ammunition, as the anti-aircraft common was considered more useful, even if it meant achieving much less armor penetration.[2] Bursting charges were 7.25 pounds (3.29 kg) explosive D composition A, the special common had only 0.9-1.2 kg due to its thicker walls (AP).[2]

Loading Edit

At the "LOAD" command, or if the mount is executing "RAPID" loading: (NOTE: Rapid loading means that, when the gun fires, the gun crew immediately reloads the gun without command until "CEASE FIRE" or "CHECK FIRE" is given.)[12]

 
Rammer Tray with Powder Case and Projectile ready for ramming.

The Powder-Man:[5]: 175 

  1. Verifies that the RAMMER SPADE is at the rear of the "Rammer Tray" (see picture)
  2. Slips the "Butterfly" primer protector off the base of the powder case that is sticking knee high out of powder hoist on the deck.
  3. Throws the protector out of the mount.
  4. Pulls the powder case out of the hoist, and lifts it into the rammer tray.
  5. Verifies that the case is back against the rammer spade.
  6. Clears his arms from the tray.

The Projectile-Man:[5]: 175 

  1. Verifies that the powder case is in the rammer tray.
  2. Pulls the projectile out of the waist high projectile hoist.
  3. Places projectile in front of the powder case in the tray.
  4. Clears his arms from the tray.
  5. Pulls down on the RAMMER CONTROL (see RAMMER CONTROL at the upper left corner of picture).

Rammer Load Cycle:[5]: 172 

  1. Pulling down on the Rammer Control lever opens hydraulic valves inside the Rammer Controller.
  2. The opened valves port high pressure hydraulic fluid to the "Hydraulic Ram Cylinder" in the Slide behind the tray. The Ram Cylinder is connected to the "Rammer Cross Head". (The white horizontal bar behind the Spade in the picture.) The Cross Head supports the Rammer Spade as it moves in the tray. When the cylinder is pressurized, the Cross Head and Spade are driven forward in the Tray.
  3. As the spade moves forward, it pushes the projectile and powder case into the chamber. The spade's time of travel, from the rear of the tray to the breech, is one second. As it approaches the breech, the Cross Head pushes through a spring latch that locks it there.[5]: 173  At the same time, the Cross Head trips another lever connected to the Rammer Controller, and the Controller releases the hydraulic pressure to the Ram Cylinder.[5]: 174 
  4. When the powder case clears the top of the breech block, the block automatically rises.[5]: 175 
  5. The rising breech block displaces the rammer spade behind the powder case by pushing the spring-loaded spade up. This continues until the rammer spade is off the powder case, and the block has sealed the chamber.[5]: 175 
  6. The gun is loaded and ready to fire.

Firing Edit

This gun can be fired either electrically or by percussion.[5]

When the gun fires, the following automatic events happen in two seconds:[12]

  1. During Recoil:
    1. The Rammer Crosshead is unlocked.
    2. The Rammer Control is pushed to the up position by a cam on top of the rearward moving Housing.
    3. With the Rammer Control up, the Rammer Controller ports high pressure hydraulic fluid to the retract side of the Rammer Cylinder, and the Rammer Crosshead and Spade drive back to the rear of the Rammer Tray.
  2. During Counter-recoil:
    1. The Firing Pin is cocked.
    2. The Breech Block is lowered.
    3. The spent Powder Case is ejected out of the Chamber, and back down the Rammer Tray. There it is caught by the gloved Hot Case Man, and thrown out of the mount.
    4. Just before the housing finishes returning to "In Battery", a valve is opened for a second, and a blast of compressed air is sent down the bore to clean it out.

The gun is ready to be reloaded.

Gun mounts Edit

Types Edit

 
A Mk 21 5"/38 caliber open pedestal mount in 1942.
 
Two Mk 22 5"/38 caliber mounts aboard the destroyer USS Porter, 1942.
 
USMC crewed Mk 28 Mod 2 5"/38 caliber mount aboard USS New Jersey, 1984.
 
Left rear view of a Mark 37 5"/38 caliber mount. NOTE: No Fuze Setter.
 
Forward Mk 38 5"/38 caliber mount aboard the destroyer USS Hamner.
 
The World War II Naval 5"/38 gun preserved in the Marine Corps History Museum in Zuoying,Kaohsiung.

There are four basic mount types:

Twin [5]: 158 
  • All sat on a base ring stand, and had an ammunition handling room, called the Upper Handling Room (as it was above the main magazine), below the mount.
  • They all had:
    • Horizontal periscopic sights with movable-prism sight setting.
    • Two powered, fuze setting, projectile hoists.
    • Two powered powder case hoists.
    • Powered training and elevating drives (in this context, "training" means rotating the mount on its stand).[5]: 47 
  • This mount was the standard installation on battleships, cruisers, early destroyer leader (Porter, Somers) classes (these mounts on the DL's were single-purpose/anti-surface ship only),[2] and later destroyers (starting with the Allen M. Sumner class). It was also used on the island (starboard) side of the Essex-class aircraft carriers.[5]: 47 
Enclosed single
All enclosed single mounts sat on a base ring stand, and had an upper handling room. The enclosed single mount was used on some early destroyer classes (Gridley (1937) up to and including the Fletcher class (1942)), but by the end of World War II, it was mainly found on the many minelayers and auxiliaries which were developed from the older classes of destroyers, as well as on most of the destroyer escorts, and many large auxiliaries (repair ships, destroyer tenders, etc.).[5]
Open single base ring mount
Open mount with Upper-Handling Room. Used on the port and starboard gangways, just below the flight deck, on Yorktown-class aircraft carriers[5] and Benham through Gleaves-class destroyers.
Open single pedestal mount
This was the first 5"/38cal type installed. It was put on the Farragut-class destroyers in 1934 through to the Bagley class (1937). Some of these mounts placed on ship's forecastles were partially enclosed to protect the crew against bow spray, but they were still considered an open mount. Since these mounts did not have Upper Handling Rooms, they could be installed on ships without extensive reconstruction. For that reason, they were frequently used on armed merchant ships.[5]

Farragut and Mahan had only open mounts. The Gridley class introduced the enclosed single gun house, but not all of its guns were enclosed. The Benham class replaced all pedestal mounts with open base ring mounts later on. The Fletcher class was the first to only have enclosed guns (except for the Porter and Somers destroyer leaders).

There are several models of the 5"/38, differentiated by the word Mark (or its abbreviation MK) and a number. Variations to the basic design are called Modifications (or its abbreviation Mod). For instance, 5"/38 MK 21 is a single-barrel open pedestal mount widely used on amphibious ships, auxiliaries, and merchant ships. The 5"/38 MK 30 is a single enclosed base ring mount widely used on destroyer escorts. The 5"/38 MK 38 is a twin mount specifically designed for newer destroyers.

5"/38 caliber gun mounts[2]
Mark/mod Barrels Weight Design Use
Mk21 Single 31,200 lb (14,200 kg) Open pedestal Some 1930s built combatants, auxiliaries, merchant ships
Mk22 Twin 75,250 lb (34,130 kg) Enclosed base ring
Mk24 Single 29,260 lb (13,270 kg) Open pedestal 1930s built aircraft carriers
Mk28 Mod0 Twin 156,295 lb (70,894 kg) Enclosed base ring Pre-Iowa-class battleships
Mk28 Mod2 Twin 170,635 lb (77,399 kg) Enclosed base ring Iowa-class battleships
Mk29 Mod0 Twin 108,000 lb (49,000 kg) Enclosed base ring Cruisers, Atlanta-class light cruisers
Mk30 Mod0 Single 40,900 lb (18,600 kg) Enclosed base ring Destroyers, auxiliaries, USCG high endurance cutters
Mk30 Mod1 Single 33,500 lb (15,200 kg) Open base ring Destroyer rear mounts, escort carriers
Mk30 Mod69 Single 45,000 lb (20,000 kg) Enclosed base ring Destroyer escorts with the upper rear edge of the Mark 38 blast shield beveled to clear hedgehog projectiles from a launcher astern of the gun mount[13]
Mk32 Mod0 Twin 105,600 lb (47,900 kg) Enclosed base ring Cruisers, aircraft carriers
Mk32 Mod4 Twin 120,369 lb (54,598 kg) Enclosed base ring Cruisers, aircraft carriers
Mk37 Mod0 Single 34,700 lb (15,700 kg) Open pedestal Armed merchants, auxiliaries
Mk38 Mod0 Twin 95,700 lb (43,400 kg) Enclosed base ring Destroyers

Ammunition delivery Edit

Since this gun fires semi-fixed ammunition, each round is delivered to the gun in two pieces—a projectile and a powder case.[5]

Base ring mounts
The ready service ammunition is kept in the upper handling room just below the mount. The projectile travels up to the gun room (also called the gun house) through an electric-hydraulic hoist.[5] It arrives next to the projectile-man nose down and waist high. If the projectile has a time fuze, the fuze is automatically set as it goes up the hoist, and the hoist maintains the ordered fuze setting from the fire control system as long as the projectile stays in the hoist.[5] The powder case is sent up through a powder scuttle in the gun room's deck just next to the powder man's feet.[5] It arrives with its base up, and the primer covered with a protector called the "Butterfly". The men in the upper handling room hand carry the projectiles and powder cases from the ready service racks to the lower ends of the hoists while avoiding the equipment hanging down from the rotating mount. In a twin mount executing "Rapid continuous fire" (the firing keys are held closed, and the gun fires as soon as the breech closes), the crew move 30 to 44 projectiles and powder cases per minute.
Pedestal mounts
The ready service ammunition is kept in lockers or compartments arrayed around the mount. The projectiles and powder cases are hand carried from ready service to the left side of the moving mount. The projectile is placed nose down in one of three Fuze Setter Mechanisms (commonly called fuze pots) on the mount. If the man is delivering a projectile with a mechanical time fuze, he then spins a hand crank just in front of that fuze setter mechanism. This would dial in the ordered fuze time into that projectile. The powder case is placed in a rack bolted to the mount's deck just behind the powder-man's feet.

Mount crew Edit

Depending on the mount, a 5"/38 caliber gun could have a crew of 15 to 27 personnel in the gun room and upper handling room.[14] This does not include the personnel needed in the magazines during extended actions. There were two modes of mount operation that the crew was trained and expected to know. The primary mode was "automatic control", where the mount was slaved to the fire control system. But if the fire control system was damaged, or if the ship's power was out; the mount could continue the action in "local control". In US service, most gun crews were US Navy personnel. Even the civilian Merchant Marine ships had a small detachment of the Navy Armed Guard on board to operate the 5"/38 and other guns. One exception to this was on ships with a Marine Detachment, where the Marines manned one of the mounts, usually decorated with the Marine emblem (see the USMC emblem on USS New Jersey's Mk 28, Mod 2 mount picture above).

Mount captain
A senior Petty Officer or Gunnery Sergeant who was in command of the mount. In enclosed mounts, he stood on an interior platform that was located half way up the back bulkhead of the enclosure. There was a hatch on the top of the enclosure where he could stick his head and shoulders out the mount's top. On some mounts, this hatch had a steel hood welded around the back and sides (see an example of this hood in the USS New Jersey picture). This hood protected the Mount Captain from the muzzle blasts of adjacent weapons. He was wearing a sound powered telephone so that he could receive action orders from the battery commander, and send mount status reports back. Covering the telephone headset, there is a helmet specially designed to fit over the phone. Around his neck, he has a pair of gunnery binoculars which had a reticle scaled in angular mils. By ducking his head down into the mount, he could see the entire interior of the mount from his platform. Next to him was a voice tube down to the upper handling room. At arms length, he had switches for controlling communication, emergency lighting, and battle lanterns.[15] His duties during Automatic Control was to receive action orders from the battery commander (e.g.: "Mount 51, plot. Surface action starboard. Target destroyer. Bearing 060. Range nine thousand, five hundred yards. Slow salvo."), give the appropriate orders to his Gun Room and Upper Handling Room crews (e.g.: "Match pointers. Switch to automatic. Handling room fill the hoists with able able common and full service charge. Standby for slow salvo."), verify that his orders were being followed, and report his gun's status back to the battery commander (e.g: "Plot, mount 51 in auto. Bore clear."). In Local Control, he aims and fires his mount's gun(s)—sometimes without external help. With his gunnery binoculars, he estimates the range to the target, and its bearing rate. He then mentally converts these into range and deflection orders to his Sight Setter. After firing, he observes the fall of his shot, and makes sight corrections to his Sight Setter if necessary.
Gun Captain
The Gunner's Mate(s) responsible for maintaining the mount. Daily, he goes through a process of checking fluid levels, lubricating bearings, cleaning gun sights, cycling powered equipment, testing firing systems, checking gas pressures, and verifying that all the equipment that will be needed in an action is in his mount. In twin mounts, there will be a gun captain assigned to each gun assembly. The gun captain usually stands on his foot high tool box welded to the mount's deck, and offset from the gun's centerline (see the man in black standing on the box in the MK21 open mount picture). This places him high and aft of the rammer motor. From there, he can watch the actions of the powder-man, projectile-man, breech block, and rammer. He can verify that the gun returns to battery before the next round is loaded. If something goes wrong, he is free to move around his gun to fix the problem. He knows everybody's job, and can step in if necessary. At the mount captain's command, he manually opens the breech block before the first round is loaded, and reports if the bore is clear.[15] His duties are the same in automatic or local control.
Pointer
 
Single Mount Elevation Indicator Regulator
Controls the mount's elevation and firing. He sits in the left front corner of the mount. In front of him, are his optical sight, hand wheels, and elevation drive controls. To his right, about elbow high, is a large box called the Elevation Indicator Regulator. (pictured) This box controls the elevation power drive. Through a window on top of the box, he sees a set of dials that indicate the elevation of the gun, and the automatic elevation orders coming from the Fire Control System. Above the Indicator Regulator is the Electrical Fire Select Switch. It is a rotary switch with three positions: Off, Local, and Auto. Off disables the electrical firing system on the mount. Local enables the electric firing key on his right hand wheel. Auto enables the off mount electrical firing circuit from the Fire Control System. Just outside his right knee, is the Percussion Select Lever. This mechanical lever has two positions: Safe, and Armed. When it is in the armed position, the mechanical linkage for percussion firing is enabled. His right footrest is at one end of this linkage, and the firing pin sear in the breech block is at the other. By rocking his right foot forward, he fires the gun. Electrical firing is the primary firing method. When the Mount Captain commands, "Match pointers. Switch to Automatic.", he looks down at the dials on his Indicator-Regulator. The dials tell him the difference between the gun's present elevation and the ordered elevation electrically coming from the Fire Control System by synchro. He changes the elevation of the gun, by moving his hand wheels, until the dial difference is zero. His dials are now "matched", and he switches the elevation drive into Auto. This disengages his hand wheels, and gives elevation control to the Fire Control System. Then, he moves the Electrical Fire Select Switch to "AUTO", and reports back to the Mount Captain, "Elevation in auto." He may now look through his sight, and if the Sight Setter has matched the sight-setter dial pointers, he will see the target in the cross-hairs. When the Mount Captain commands, "Switch to Local", he switches the elevation drive and the Electrical Fire Select Switch to local. In local control, he controls the gun's elevation with his hand wheels to keep his sight's horizontal cross hair on the target. At the command of the Mount Captain, he fires the gun by squeezing the firing key on his right hand wheel.
Trainer
 
Single Mount Train Indicator Regulator
Controls the mount's train angle (bearing). He sits in the right front corner of the mount (see the far right man in the Mk21 open mount picture). In front of him, are his optical sight, hand wheels, and train drive controls. Between his knees is a large box called the Train Indicator Regulator. (pictured) This box controls the train power drive. On top of the box, is a window with a set of dials that indicate the train angle of the gun, and the automatic train orders electrically coming from the Fire Control System by synchro. When the Mount Captain commands, "Match pointers. Switch to Automatic.", he looks down at the dials on his Indicator-Regulator. The dials also tell him the difference between the gun's present train angle and the ordered train angle. He changes the bearing of the gun, by moving his hand wheels, until the dial difference is zero. His dials are now "matched", and he switches the train drive into Auto. This disengages his hand wheels, and gives train angle control to the Fire Control System. Then, he reports back to the Mount Captain, "Train in auto." He may now look through his sight, and if the Sight Setter has matched the sight-setter dial pointers, he will see the target in the cross-hairs. When the Mount Captain commands, "Switch to Local", he switches the train drive to local. In local control, he controls the gun's train angle with his hand wheels to keep his sight's vertical cross hair on the target.
Sight setter
 
Single Mount Sight Setter Dials
Operates the sight setting equipment. In single mounts, he stands just behind the trainer (see the man with headphones in the Mk21 open mount picture), while in twin mounts he sits between the guns, just forward of the projectile hoists. The sight setter moves the sights' reticles relative to the barrel's axis. In early open mounts, this was done by moving the platforms to which the sights were bolted. Sights in enclosed mounts have movable prisms in their optical paths.[16] The sight setter has three dials, and two hand cranks. (pictured) The two right dials and right hand crank control the elevation reticle offset (called Sight Angle[17]). The upper right dial is scaled in minutes of arc, and the lower right dial is in yards. The left dial and hand crank control the reticle's left and right offset (called Sight Deflection[18]), and the dial is scaled in angular mils. When the mount is in Automatic Control, he turns his hand cranks to keep index marks on his dials matched to lines on the central disks of the dials. These disks are electrically controlled by the Fire Control System by synchro.[19] This is called matching the pointers,[19] and it allows the sights to remain on the target while the mount is controlled by the Fire Control System. In local control, he takes sighting orders from the Mount Captain in yards of range and mils of deflection.
Fuze setter
 
Single Mount Fuze-setting Indicator Regulator
He operates the equipment which sets the fuze time on projectiles with mechanical time fuzes. On a single enclosed mount, he sits below and just outboard of the Pointer's seat. Under the Pointer's seat, and in front the Fuse Setter, is the Fuse Indicator Regulator. (pictured) It is a box with a window, a hand crank, and a selector lever. On a twin mount, he and his Fuze Indicator Regulator sit next to the Sight Setter between the guns. When the mount is put in Automatic control, he flips the selector lever to Auto, and this electrically powered Fuze Indicator Regulator automatically follows the fuze setting orders sent from the Fire Control System by synchro. In Local Control, he follows the Mount Captain's fuze orders by spinning the hand crank until the dials in the window read the correct fuze time.
Powder-man
Slides the primer protector off the powder case, and then lifts the case from the powder scuttle at his feet to the gun's rammer tray.
Projectile-man
Moves the projectile from the hoist to the rammer tray in front of the just-placed powder case, and then he pulls the rammer lever to load the projectile and powder case into the chamber.
Hot case man
When the gun fires, he catches the ejected powder case and throws it out of the mount.
Check sight
He verifies that the mount is aiming at the target.

Ammunition Edit

 
Drawing of loaded Semi-Fixed round.

This gun uses semi-fixed ammunition. (Pictured)[5] (Also called Separated Ammunition.)[20] Each round consists of a projectile and a powder case. The two parts of the round are kept separate until they get to the gun.[12] At the gun, they are first combined on the rammer tray, and then power rammed into the chamber together with one ram cycle. The powder case completely fills the volume of the chamber, and its length seats the projectile's rotating band into the bore's rifling. This is different from a naval bag gun. In a bag gun: (1) The projectile, by itself, is power rammed into the chamber until its rotating band is seated in the bore's rifling. (2) The rammer is retracted. (3) The powder bags are then rammed in.[12] This is also different from some artillery field guns: (1) The projectile is hand rammed into the chamber with a ramrod until its rotating band is seated in the bore's rifling. (2) The ramrod is retracted. (3) Next powder is placed in the chamber either as a bag or primed canister with the required charge. Note that the single ram operation used in semi-fixed guns decreases the loading time, and therefore increases the firing rate on medium and large caliber guns. For example, each of the nine 8"(203 mm)/55 caliber Rapid-Fire guns installed on the Des Moines-class cruiser used auto-loaded semi-fixed ammunition and had a firing rate of 10 to 12 rounds a minute.[2] See also the 8"/55 caliber Mark 71 gun. 5” rounds were often used as weights for burials at sea.

Projectile Edit

 
5"/38cal Anti-Aircraft Common (AAC) projectile.

The Projectile (pictured) has three major parts: the body, the fuze, and the explosive charge.[5]

Projectile body

The body is basically a machined steel tube with an ogive shape at one end. At the ogive and rear ends are threaded openings used to the install the shell's filler and hold the fuzes. Around the tube near the base is a copper alloy ring called the Rotating Band. This band has a diameter larger than the bore, and when the projectile and powder case are rammed into the chamber, the band is jammed into the grooves of the bore's rifling. It forms a gas seal between the projectile and the bore. Also, as the projectile travels down the barrel, the band grips the rifling to impart spin to the projectile.[21]

Fuze

The Fuse detonates the projectile to cause maximum damage to the target. Different targets required different fuzes. The safety requirements of a fuze are that... [5]: 33 

  • ... it is safe to handle. (i.e.: It will not arm if dropped, rolled, or shaken.) [5]: 33 
  • ... it remains unarmed in the bore, and until the projectile is well clear of the firing ship to protect exposed personnel. [5]: 33  Therefore, when the gun is fired, the following events take place:
    • 14,000g acceleration [5]: 34  from the burning propellant in the bore. This acceleration is used to setback (i.e.: Force to the rear.) [5]: 34  some fuze parts from unarmed to armed positions due to their inertia.
    • Centrifugal force from the 12,360 rpm [5]: 34  projectile rotation. This force causes other parts to move outward.[5]: 34 
    • 7.2g deceleration [5]: 34  from aerodynamic drag after the projectile leaves the muzzle. Due to inertia, other movable parts will creep [5]: 34  forward.

All of these events must take place in the correct order to arm the fuze.

List of fuze types:[5]

Mechanical time fuze
A nose time fuze that detonates the shell after an adjustable time interval has elapsed since firing.[22]
Base detonating fuze
A base impact fuze screwed into the rear of a projectile to protect the fuze during impact. It delays the shell's detonation about 25 ms after impact, allowing the projectile to penetrate the target prior to detonation.[5]
Point detonating fuze
A nose impact fuze. Very fast detonation on the surface of the target.
VT fuze
The VT (Variable Time, this is a counter-espionage decoy designation) fuze is a proximity fuze.[23] It is a nose electronic fuze that does not require impact to trigger.[24] Designed to detonate close to the target. It was originally intended to be used against air targets. Now it is also used in shore bombardment and surface actions against fast boats. This is because the VT fuze has proved well suited for bursting the shell at the correct distance above the ground or water for maximum damage to lightly armored targets over a large area.[25]
Auxiliary detonating fuze
In the projectile drawing, an Auxiliary Detonating Fuze is screwed onto the bottom of the Mechanical Time Fuze. This is because the time fuze primer does not have enough explosive shock to detonate the relatively insensitive Explosive "D". The Auxiliary fuze uses an intermediate explosive that is set off by the time fuze primer, and in turn, sets off the Explosive "D".[5]
5"/38 cal projectiles[5][2]
Body label Full name Description
AA Anti-aircraft A high capacity fragmenting shell with a nose mechanical time fuze
AAC Anti-aircraft common A medium penetrating shell with a mechanical time fuze and a base detonating fuze. Designed to be used on either aircraft or lightly armored ships. For aircraft, the time fuze is set to explode the shell just before it reaches the target. The detonation shock wave and the expanding cone of shrapnel increases the chance of target destruction. For vessels, the time fuze is left on safe, and the base detonating fuze will explode the shell 25 milliseconds after impact.
AAVT Anti-aircraft VT A high capacity fragmenting shell with a VT (proximity) fuze.
AP Armor-piercing A thick walled penetrating projectile with a base detonating fuze. The explosive charge is usually Explosive D because it is less sensitive to impact.[5]
SS Star shell A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze. Packed inside is a flare attached to a parachute. When the fuze fires, a small black powder charge expels the flare and parachute out the back. Before radar, star shells were used to illuminate the target at night. They are still used in support of troops at night, or illumination of an at sea rescue.
WP White phosphorus A thin walled shell with a point detonating fuze used for smoke screens. It also has some incendiary effect.
AA non-frag Anti-Aircraft non-fragmentation A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze and packed with a smoke producing chemical that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge. It is used in practice anti-aircraft shoots.
AAVT non-frag Anti-Aircraft VT non-fragmentation A thin walled shell with a VT fuze and packed with a smoke producing chemical that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge. It is used in practice anti-aircraft shoots.
BL Blind load A shell without a fuze, and filled with sand. It is used in practice surface shoots.
W Window A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze and packed with strips of metal foil that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge. It is used to confuse enemy radar.

Powder case Edit

 
5"/38cal Full Service Charge.

The powder case is a brass or steel alloy cylinder closed at one end. It holds the propelling charge and a case combination primer. The charge is held packed around the primer by a wad, distance piece (not in clearing charge), and plug.[26] When rammed in the chamber with the projectile, the Full and Reduced charge cases are designed to completely fill the volume of the chamber from the breechblock face to the base of the projectile when its rotating band is jammed into the bore's rifling.[5] In other words, the powder case acts a rammer extension for the projectile. There are three types of powder cases:

Full service charge (pictured)
A 26.7 inch (679 mm) long, 12.3 pound (5.6 kg) brass case with 15.5 pounds (7.0 kg) of smokeless or flashless (used at night) powder.[2] The Full Service Charge new gun initial velocity is 2,600 ft/s (790 m/s).[2] It is used in surface and anti-aircraft actions.[5]
Reduced charge
The Reduced Charge uses the same case as the Full Service Charge, but with only 3.6 pounds (1.6 kg) of powder and a longer distance piece.[2] The Reduced Charge new gun initial velocity is 1,200 ft/s (370 m/s).[2] It is used in shore bombardment to lob shells, like a mortar, over obstacles to hit targets on the opposite side, and for propelling star shells at a lower velocity to protect the parachute from being shredded while it is deployed.[5]
Clearing charge (Pictured)
 
5"/38cal Clearing Charge.
The clearing charge (also called, "the short round") is a short case; plugged just above the wad.[20] The distance piece between the wad and plug is left out. Its powder charge is less than a full service charge.[20] This case is essential for the safety of the mount because it is needed to clear a gun after a misfire.[20] Due to its importance, it is kept in a special container in the mount whenever the ship is in a combat zone. A misfire is especially dangerous in semi-fixed guns.[12] When the breech is opened after the misfire, the faulty powder case can be extracted, but the projectile will remain jammed in the rifling.[20] Also, all or part of the extracted case's cork plug may still be wedged in the chamber behind the projectile. This "fouls" the chamber because it decreases the chamber's volume. And, since Full and Reduced charge cases take up the full volume of an unfouled chamber (see loaded Semi-Fixed round drawing above), any residue left from the previously extracted case will prevent them from fully loading into the chamber. Therefore, the clearing charge is made short so that it will fit into a fouled chamber.
After hand extracting the bad case from the chamber, the clearing charge is removed from its special container and is hand rammed into the chamber. With the clearing charge sealed in the chamber, the projectile is fired out the muzzle.[12] It is important to clear the projectile through the muzzle because it is not easy nor safe pushing a bore rod down the barrel to force a fuzed projectile back through the chamber and into the gun house.[27] Also, if the gun has fired a number of rounds just prior to the misfire, time is critical because the barrel may be hot enough to cook off the high explosive in the projectile.[28] This would destroy the mount.[12]

Deployment Edit

(to be moved to a suitable page)

Ships launched with 5-inch/38 guns

Aircraft carriers

Escort Carriers

Battleships

Heavy cruisers

Light cruisers

Destroyers

Destroyer escorts

Attack Transports

Attack Cargo

See also Edit

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era Edit

Weapons of comparable role in successive U.S. Navy service Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 December 2021. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r DiGiulian, Tony (February 2013). "United States of America 5"/38 (12.7 cm) Mark 12". navweaps.com. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  3. ^ Gridley (June 1937) marks the introduction of the base ring mount in the main line of destroyers. The last 2 Mahan class ships also had them, Dunlap was commissioned in June 1937, too. Porter entered service much sooner
  4. ^ a Bore diameter greater than 4 inches (102 mm) and less than 8 inches (203 mm).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957.
  6. ^ Naval Weapons of WW2, Campbell, P106
  7. ^ DiGiulian, Tony (November 2006). "United States of America 5"/38 (127 mm) Mark 12". navweaps.com. Retrieved 2 March 2018. Pedestal and other mounts lacking integral hoists: 12 – 15 rounds per minute
  8. ^ Naval Weapons of WW2, Campbell, P139
  9. ^ DiGiulian, Tony (November 2006). "United States of America 5"/38 (12.7 cm) Mark 12". navweaps.com. Retrieved 2 March 2018. The earliest mountings as [sic] used on USS Farragut (DD-348) were pedestal mounts with shell and cartridge hoists located on the deck behind the gun mount.
  10. ^ What this article calls the "rammer spade" is called the "power spade" in the gun assembly picture, and is parenthetically called the "shell guard" in the rammer tray illustration. This is probably the result of different Navy documents written by different people at different times. Ultimately, it became the "rammer spade" as shown in the rammer tray illustration. This is because it looked like a small, leather-covered garden spade—and it was what rammed the round into the chamber.
  11. ^ "Action Report: 24 August 1942". cv6.org. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Gunner's Mate 3, Vol. 1, NAVPERS 10158-A. Washington, DC: US GPO. 1952.
  13. ^ Franklin, Bruce Hampton (1999) The Buckley-class Destroyer Escorts Naval Institute Press ISBN 1-55750-280-3 p. 34
  14. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. Approximately 27 men are required to man all stations in the mount and the upper handling room.
  15. ^ a b "How the 5"/38 crews operated". Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  16. ^ Naval Ordnance and Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A. Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. Movable prism-type telescopes are mounted at the pointer's, checker's, and trainer's stations.
  17. ^ Gunner's Mate 3, Vol. 1, NAVPERS 10158-A. Washington, DC: US GPO. 1952. p. 32.
  18. ^ Gunner's Mate 3, Vol. 1, NAVPERS 10158-A. Washington, DC: US GPO. 1952. p. 38.
  19. ^ a b Gunner's Mate 3, Vol. 1, NAVPERS 10158-A. Washington, DC: US GPO. 1952. p. 66.
  20. ^ a b c d e "Definitions and Information about Naval Guns: Part 2 – Ammunition, Fuzes, Projectiles and Propellants". Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  21. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. p. 29. The three primary functions of the rotating band are to seal the bore, to position and center the rear end of the projectile, and to impart rotation to the projectile.
  22. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: U.S. Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. ... time fuzes are clockwork mechanisms used to obtain timed air bursts.
  23. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. The radio proximity or VT fuze is used in all of the types of projectiles which can use mechanical time fuzes...
  24. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. Point detonating, time, and VT fuzes may all be called nose fuzes ...
  25. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. VT-fuzed ammunition is very effective on exposed personnel and lightly armored targets ...
  26. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. In 40 mm and larger guns, a cardboard disc, or wad, is forced into the case and a distance piece, if one is needed, placed on top.
  27. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. Whether a gun is hot or cold, the risks attendant upon removing a loaded and fuzed projectile seated in the bore, by backing out, are considered unwarranted...
  28. ^ Naval Ordnance And Gunnery, Volume 1, Naval Ordnance, NAVPERS 10797-A (1957 ed.). Washington, DC: US Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel. 1957. A loaded and fuzed projectile, seated in the bore of a gun that is hot from previous firing, presents a hazard, since detonation of the projectile is possible as a result of being heated.

External links Edit

  • Detailed description and history 5"/38 including ammunition and Mark data
  • Illustrated descriptions of MK 30 & MK 38, list of ammunition for all Marks
  • Illustrated description of MK 38
  • Illustrated Operating Instructions for MK XXI model
  • Photos of 5"/38 ammunition
  • Naval Ordnance and Gunnery, 1957 Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NavPers 10797-A

inch, caliber, mark, caliber, united, states, dual, purpose, naval, also, installed, single, purpose, mounts, handful, ships, caliber, barrel, length, compromise, between, previous, united, states, standard, angle, anti, aircraft, united, states, naval, termin. The Mark 12 5 38 caliber gun was a United States dual purpose naval gun but also installed in single purpose mounts on a handful of ships The 38 caliber barrel was a mid length compromise between the previous United States standard 5 51 low angle gun and 5 25 anti aircraft gun United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile 5 inches 127 mm in diameter and the barrel was 38 calibers long The increased barrel length provided greatly improved performance in both anti aircraft and anti surface roles compared to the 5 25 gun However except for the barrel length and the use of semi fixed ammunition the 5 38 gun was derived from the 5 25 gun Both weapons had power ramming which enabled rapid fire at high angles against aircraft The 5 38 entered service on USS Farragut commissioned in 1934 the first new destroyer design since the last Clemson was built in 1922 The base ring mount which improved the effective rate of fire entered service on USS Porter commissioned in 1936 2 3 5 38 caliber gunTwo Mk 30 single enclosed base ring mounts on USS David W TaylorTypeDeck gunPlace of originUnited StatesService historyIn service1934 2008Used byUnited States Navy United States Coast Guard Royal Navy Danish Navy Italian Navy Japan Maritime Self Defense Force South Vietnamese Navy and every navy that bought surplus World War II US Navy warshipsWarsWorld War II Korean War Vietnam War Gulf War Falklands War and wars that involved navies who bought surplus World War II US Navy warshipsProduction historyDesigned1931 1932SpecificationsMassMk 12 Gun Assembly 3 990 lb 1 810 kg Mounts varied from 29 260 lb 13 270 kg to 170 653 lb 77 407 kg LengthMk 12 Gun Assembly 223 8 in 5 68 m Barrel length190 in 4 83 m bore 157 2 in 3 99 m riflingCrewVaried on mount typeShell127 680mmR 1 53 to 55 lb 24 to 25 kg Caliber5 in 127 mm BreechVertical sliding wedgeRecoil15 in 38 cm Elevation 15 to 85 Traverse328 5 degreesRate of fireDesign 15 rpmMuzzle velocity2 600 ft s 790 m s initialSightsOptical telescopeAmong naval historians the 5 38 gun is considered the best intermediate caliber 4 dual purpose naval gun of World War II 5 especially as it was usually under the control of the advanced Mark 37 Gun Fire Control System which provided accurate and timely firing against surface and air targets Even this advanced system required nearly 1000 rounds of ammunition expenditure per aircraft kill 6 However the planes were normally killed by shell fragments and not direct hits barrage fire was used with many guns firing in the air at the same time This would result in large walls of shell fragments being put up to take out one or several planes or in anticipation of an unseen plane this being justifiable as one plane was capable of significant destruction The comparatively high rate of fire for a gun of its caliber earned it an enviable reputation particularly as an anti aircraft weapon in which role it was commonly employed by United States Navy vessels Base ring mounts with integral hoists had a nominal rate of fire of 15 rounds per minute per barrel however with a well trained crew 22 rounds per minute per barrel was possible for short periods 5 On pedestal and other mounts lacking integral hoists 12 to 15 rounds per minute was the rate of fire 7 Useful life expectancy was 4600 effective full charges EFC per barrel 8 The 5 38 cal gun was mounted on a very large number of US Navy ships in the World War II era It was backfitted to many of the World War I era battleships during their wartime refits usually replacing 5 25 guns that were fitted in the 1930s It has left active US Navy service but it is still on mothballed ships of the United States Navy reserve fleets It is also used by a number of nations who bought or were given US Navy surplus ships Millions of rounds of ammunition were produced for these guns with over 720 000 rounds still remaining in Navy storage depots in the mid 1980s because of the large number of Reserve Fleet ships with 5 38 cal guns on board Contents 1 Mark 12 5 38 cal gun assembly 1 1 Characteristics 1 2 Loading 1 3 Firing 2 Gun mounts 2 1 Types 2 2 Ammunition delivery 2 3 Mount crew 3 Ammunition 3 1 Projectile 3 2 Powder case 4 Deployment 5 See also 5 1 Weapons of comparable role performance and era 5 2 Weapons of comparable role in successive U S Navy service 6 Notes 7 External linksMark 12 5 38 cal gun assembly Edit Mk 12 gun assemblyEach mount carries one or two Mk 12 5 38cal Gun Assemblies The gun assembly shown is used in single mounts and it is the right gun in twin mounts It is loaded from the left side The left gun in twin mounts is the mirror image of the right gun and it is loaded from the right side The Mk12 gun assembly weighs 3 990 lb 1 810 kg 2 The Mark 12 Gun Assembly was introduced in 1934 where it was first used in single pedestal mounts on the Farragut class destroyers 9 but by the time of World War II they had been installed in single and twin mounts on nearly every major warship and auxiliary in the US fleet 2 Characteristics Edit The major Mk12 Gun Assembly characteristics are 5 158 2 Semi automatic During recoil some of the recoil energy is stored in the counter recoil system That stored energy is used during counter recoil to prepare the gun for the next round The firing pin is cocked the breech is opened the spent propellant case is ejected and the bore is cleared of debris with an air blast Hand loaded A projectile man and a powder man are stationed at each gun assembly Their job is to move the round consisting of a projectile and a propellant case from the hoists to the rammer tray projecting from the gun s breech and then start the ram cycle The powder case is placed first and the projectile rests against the powder case Vertical Sliding Wedge Breech Block Power rammed This gun used a 7 5 hp 5 6 kW electric hydraulic power rammer that was designed to ram a 93 pound 42 kg 47 5 in long 1 21 m round combined weight of projectile and propellant into the chamber at any gun elevation in less than one second 5 172 The rammer s control box hydraulic fluid tank and AC motor are bolted to the top of the slide see the Gun Assembly picture above The hydraulically driven rammer spade called the power spade in that picture is at the back of the rammer tray If the multiple names of the spade are confusing look at this footnote 10 Hand ramming was also possible in case of power failures with rate of fire approximately cut in half 11 Vertical sliding wedge breech block see drawing The breech block closes the chamber behind the propellant case It also contains the firing pin assembly Hydraulic recoil Two hydraulic pistons in the housing absorb the major shock of recoil as the housing moves back inside the slide see picture They also buffer the end of counter recoil for a soft return to battery Drawing of the recoil and counter recoil systems The arrow shows the motion of the housing in the slide during recoil Pneumatic counter recoil At the end of recoil the counter recoil system moves the housing forward again until it is back in battery and holds it there at any gun elevation A chamber in the housing is filled with compressed air At the rear of this chamber is a 3 5 in 8 9 cm cylindrical hole with a chevron packing 5 161 Projecting through the hole is a movable piston that abuts the back of the slide see picture The air pressure in the chamber attempts to push the piston out of the chamber but the piston can t move because of the slide Therefore since the piston can t go backwards the air pressure in the chamber forces the housing forward When the gun is in battery the pressure in this chamber is about 1 500 psi 10 MPa During recoil the pressure rises to about 2 250 psi 15 5 MPa 5 162 Barrel designation 5 38 Caliber 5 is the caliber of this gun The term caliber used here is the artillery caliber definition and its value is equal to the bore diameter as measured from land to land 5 81 Lands are the raised portions of the bore rifling between the grooves 5 81 note artillery caliber and small arms caliber are not the same 38 caliber means that the barrel from breech face to muzzle is 38 calibers in length 5 81 As this gun s caliber is 5 inches 127mm its barrel length is 38 times 5 inches 190 inches 480 cm 16 ft Barrel description 5 160 Radially expanded monobloc steel alloy Weight 2 000 pounds 910 kilograms The bore is chrome plated from the origin of rifling forward end of the chamber to the muzzle 45 groove rifling with a full uniform right hand twist in 30 Calibers 150 inches 380 centimetres Maximum bore pressure of a new gun firing an anti aircraft common projectile 40 320 pounds per square inch 278 000 kilopascals 5 34 Barrel connected to the housing with a bayonet joint that allowed for its replacement by destroyer tenders in the theater of operation without dismantling the breech mechanism or other parts 2 Ballistics Maximum horizontal range with a 55 pound 25 kg projectile is 18 000 yards 16 000 m 5 159 In the anti aircraft role the gun has a ceiling of 37 200 feet 11 300 m at 85 degrees elevation 5 159 Armor penetration with 54 pound 24 kg special common shell 2 5 0 127 mm belt armor at 4 000 yards 3 700 m 4 0 102 mm at 5 400 yards 4 900 m 3 0 76 mm at 7 400 yards 6 800 m 2 0 51 mm at 11 000 yards 10 000 m 1 0 25 mm deck armor at 13 800 yards 12 600 m with 55 18 pounds 25 03 kg AA common shell 1 5 inches 38 mm at 10 000 yards 9 100 m Range with 55 18 pound 25 03 kg AAC Mark 49 792 mps 2 10 9 506 yards 8 692 m 15 11 663 yards 10 665 m 20 13 395 yards 12 248 m 25 14 804 yards 13 537 m 30 15 919 yards 14 556 m 35 16 739 yards 15 306 m 40 17 240 yards 15 760 m 45 17 392 yards 15 903 m AA Ceiling 37 200 feet 11 300 m The new gun initial muzzle velocity is 2 600 feet per second 790 metres per second and the gun life average initial muzzle velocity is about 2 500 feet per second 760 metres per second 2 US ships during World War II carried only small quantities of special common ammunition as the anti aircraft common was considered more useful even if it meant achieving much less armor penetration 2 Bursting charges were 7 25 pounds 3 29 kg explosive D composition A the special common had only 0 9 1 2 kg due to its thicker walls AP 2 Loading Edit At the LOAD command or if the mount is executing RAPID loading NOTE Rapid loading means that when the gun fires the gun crew immediately reloads the gun without command until CEASE FIRE or CHECK FIRE is given 12 Rammer Tray with Powder Case and Projectile ready for ramming The Powder Man 5 175 Verifies that the RAMMER SPADE is at the rear of the Rammer Tray see picture Slips the Butterfly primer protector off the base of the powder case that is sticking knee high out of powder hoist on the deck Throws the protector out of the mount Pulls the powder case out of the hoist and lifts it into the rammer tray Verifies that the case is back against the rammer spade Clears his arms from the tray The Projectile Man 5 175 Verifies that the powder case is in the rammer tray Pulls the projectile out of the waist high projectile hoist Places projectile in front of the powder case in the tray Clears his arms from the tray Pulls down on the RAMMER CONTROL see RAMMER CONTROL at the upper left corner of picture Rammer Load Cycle 5 172 Pulling down on the Rammer Control lever opens hydraulic valves inside the Rammer Controller The opened valves port high pressure hydraulic fluid to the Hydraulic Ram Cylinder in the Slide behind the tray The Ram Cylinder is connected to the Rammer Cross Head The white horizontal bar behind the Spade in the picture The Cross Head supports the Rammer Spade as it moves in the tray When the cylinder is pressurized the Cross Head and Spade are driven forward in the Tray As the spade moves forward it pushes the projectile and powder case into the chamber The spade s time of travel from the rear of the tray to the breech is one second As it approaches the breech the Cross Head pushes through a spring latch that locks it there 5 173 At the same time the Cross Head trips another lever connected to the Rammer Controller and the Controller releases the hydraulic pressure to the Ram Cylinder 5 174 When the powder case clears the top of the breech block the block automatically rises 5 175 The rising breech block displaces the rammer spade behind the powder case by pushing the spring loaded spade up This continues until the rammer spade is off the powder case and the block has sealed the chamber 5 175 The gun is loaded and ready to fire Firing Edit This gun can be fired either electrically or by percussion 5 When the gun fires the following automatic events happen in two seconds 12 During Recoil The Rammer Crosshead is unlocked The Rammer Control is pushed to the up position by a cam on top of the rearward moving Housing With the Rammer Control up the Rammer Controller ports high pressure hydraulic fluid to the retract side of the Rammer Cylinder and the Rammer Crosshead and Spade drive back to the rear of the Rammer Tray During Counter recoil The Firing Pin is cocked The Breech Block is lowered The spent Powder Case is ejected out of the Chamber and back down the Rammer Tray There it is caught by the gloved Hot Case Man and thrown out of the mount Just before the housing finishes returning to In Battery a valve is opened for a second and a blast of compressed air is sent down the bore to clean it out The gun is ready to be reloaded Gun mounts EditTypes Edit A Mk 21 5 38 caliber open pedestal mount in 1942 Two Mk 22 5 38 caliber mounts aboard the destroyer USS Porter 1942 USMC crewed Mk 28 Mod 2 5 38 caliber mount aboard USS New Jersey 1984 Left rear view of a Mark 37 5 38 caliber mount NOTE No Fuze Setter Forward Mk 38 5 38 caliber mount aboard the destroyer USS Hamner The World War II Naval 5 38 gun preserved in the Marine Corps History Museum in Zuoying Kaohsiung There are four basic mount types Twin 5 158 All sat on a base ring stand and had an ammunition handling room called the Upper Handling Room as it was above the main magazine below the mount They all had Horizontal periscopic sights with movable prism sight setting Two powered fuze setting projectile hoists Two powered powder case hoists Powered training and elevating drives in this context training means rotating the mount on its stand 5 47 This mount was the standard installation on battleships cruisers early destroyer leader Porter Somers classes these mounts on the DL s were single purpose anti surface ship only 2 and later destroyers starting with the Allen M Sumner class It was also used on the island starboard side of the Essex class aircraft carriers 5 47 Enclosed single All enclosed single mounts sat on a base ring stand and had an upper handling room The enclosed single mount was used on some early destroyer classes Gridley 1937 up to and including the Fletcher class 1942 but by the end of World War II it was mainly found on the many minelayers and auxiliaries which were developed from the older classes of destroyers as well as on most of the destroyer escorts and many large auxiliaries repair ships destroyer tenders etc 5 Open single base ring mount Open mount with Upper Handling Room Used on the port and starboard gangways just below the flight deck on Yorktown class aircraft carriers 5 and Benham through Gleaves class destroyers Open single pedestal mount This was the first 5 38cal type installed It was put on the Farragut class destroyers in 1934 through to the Bagley class 1937 Some of these mounts placed on ship s forecastles were partially enclosed to protect the crew against bow spray but they were still considered an open mount Since these mounts did not have Upper Handling Rooms they could be installed on ships without extensive reconstruction For that reason they were frequently used on armed merchant ships 5 Farragut and Mahan had only open mounts The Gridley class introduced the enclosed single gun house but not all of its guns were enclosed The Benham class replaced all pedestal mounts with open base ring mounts later on The Fletcher class was the first to only have enclosed guns except for the Porter and Somers destroyer leaders There are several models of the 5 38 differentiated by the word Mark or its abbreviation MK and a number Variations to the basic design are called Modifications or its abbreviation Mod For instance 5 38 MK 21 is a single barrel open pedestal mount widely used on amphibious ships auxiliaries and merchant ships The 5 38 MK 30 is a single enclosed base ring mount widely used on destroyer escorts The 5 38 MK 38 is a twin mount specifically designed for newer destroyers 5 38 caliber gun mounts 2 Mark mod Barrels Weight Design UseMk21 Single 31 200 lb 14 200 kg Open pedestal Some 1930s built combatants auxiliaries merchant ships destroyers 8 Farragut class 1932 5x1 16 Mahan class 1934 5x1 Mk22 Twin 75 250 lb 34 130 kg Enclosed base ring destroyer leaders 8 Porter class 1933 4x2 5 Somers class 1935 4x2 Mk24 Single 29 260 lb 13 270 kg Open pedestal 1930s built aircraft carriers destroyers 4 Gridley class 1935 aft 2x1 8 Bagley class 1935 aft 2x1 2 Mahan class 1936 aft 3x1 cruisers Wichita 4 8 Mk28 Mod0 Twin 156 295 lb 70 894 kg Enclosed base ring Pre Iowa class battleshipsMk28 Mod2 Twin 170 635 lb 77 399 kg Enclosed base ring Iowa class battleshipsMk29 Mod0 Twin 108 000 lb 49 000 kg Enclosed base ring Cruisers Atlanta class light cruisersMk30 Mod0 Single 40 900 lb 18 600 kg Enclosed base ring Destroyers auxiliaries USCG high endurance cutters cruisers Wichita 4 8 Mk30 Mod1 Single 33 500 lb 15 200 kg Open base ring Destroyer rear mounts escort carriers 10 Benham class 1935 aft 2x1 12 Sims class 1937 aft 2x1 out of 3x1 30 Benson class 1938 aft 2x1 out of 3x1 66 Gleaves class 1938 aft 2x1 out of 3x1 Mk30 Mod69 Single 45 000 lb 20 000 kg Enclosed base ring Destroyer escorts with the upper rear edge of the Mark 38 blast shield beveled to clear hedgehog projectiles from a launcher astern of the gun mount 13 Mk32 Mod0 Twin 105 600 lb 47 900 kg Enclosed base ring Cruisers aircraft carriersMk32 Mod4 Twin 120 369 lb 54 598 kg Enclosed base ring Cruisers aircraft carriersMk37 Mod0 Single 34 700 lb 15 700 kg Open pedestal Armed merchants auxiliariesMk38 Mod0 Twin 95 700 lb 43 400 kg Enclosed base ring DestroyersAmmunition delivery Edit Since this gun fires semi fixed ammunition each round is delivered to the gun in two pieces a projectile and a powder case 5 Base ring mounts The ready service ammunition is kept in the upper handling room just below the mount The projectile travels up to the gun room also called the gun house through an electric hydraulic hoist 5 It arrives next to the projectile man nose down and waist high If the projectile has a time fuze the fuze is automatically set as it goes up the hoist and the hoist maintains the ordered fuze setting from the fire control system as long as the projectile stays in the hoist 5 The powder case is sent up through a powder scuttle in the gun room s deck just next to the powder man s feet 5 It arrives with its base up and the primer covered with a protector called the Butterfly The men in the upper handling room hand carry the projectiles and powder cases from the ready service racks to the lower ends of the hoists while avoiding the equipment hanging down from the rotating mount In a twin mount executing Rapid continuous fire the firing keys are held closed and the gun fires as soon as the breech closes the crew move 30 to 44 projectiles and powder cases per minute Pedestal mounts The ready service ammunition is kept in lockers or compartments arrayed around the mount The projectiles and powder cases are hand carried from ready service to the left side of the moving mount The projectile is placed nose down in one of three Fuze Setter Mechanisms commonly called fuze pots on the mount If the man is delivering a projectile with a mechanical time fuze he then spins a hand crank just in front of that fuze setter mechanism This would dial in the ordered fuze time into that projectile The powder case is placed in a rack bolted to the mount s deck just behind the powder man s feet Mount crew Edit Depending on the mount a 5 38 caliber gun could have a crew of 15 to 27 personnel in the gun room and upper handling room 14 This does not include the personnel needed in the magazines during extended actions There were two modes of mount operation that the crew was trained and expected to know The primary mode was automatic control where the mount was slaved to the fire control system But if the fire control system was damaged or if the ship s power was out the mount could continue the action in local control In US service most gun crews were US Navy personnel Even the civilian Merchant Marine ships had a small detachment of the Navy Armed Guard on board to operate the 5 38 and other guns One exception to this was on ships with a Marine Detachment where the Marines manned one of the mounts usually decorated with the Marine emblem see the USMC emblem on USS New Jersey s Mk 28 Mod 2 mount picture above Mount captain A senior Petty Officer or Gunnery Sergeant who was in command of the mount In enclosed mounts he stood on an interior platform that was located half way up the back bulkhead of the enclosure There was a hatch on the top of the enclosure where he could stick his head and shoulders out the mount s top On some mounts this hatch had a steel hood welded around the back and sides see an example of this hood in the USS New Jersey picture This hood protected the Mount Captain from the muzzle blasts of adjacent weapons He was wearing a sound powered telephone so that he could receive action orders from the battery commander and send mount status reports back Covering the telephone headset there is a helmet specially designed to fit over the phone Around his neck he has a pair of gunnery binoculars which had a reticle scaled in angular mils By ducking his head down into the mount he could see the entire interior of the mount from his platform Next to him was a voice tube down to the upper handling room At arms length he had switches for controlling communication emergency lighting and battle lanterns 15 His duties during Automatic Control was to receive action orders from the battery commander e g Mount 51 plot Surface action starboard Target destroyer Bearing 060 Range nine thousand five hundred yards Slow salvo give the appropriate orders to his Gun Room and Upper Handling Room crews e g Match pointers Switch to automatic Handling room fill the hoists with able able common and full service charge Standby for slow salvo verify that his orders were being followed and report his gun s status back to the battery commander e g Plot mount 51 in auto Bore clear In Local Control he aims and fires his mount s gun s sometimes without external help With his gunnery binoculars he estimates the range to the target and its bearing rate He then mentally converts these into range and deflection orders to his Sight Setter After firing he observes the fall of his shot and makes sight corrections to his Sight Setter if necessary Gun Captain The Gunner s Mate s responsible for maintaining the mount Daily he goes through a process of checking fluid levels lubricating bearings cleaning gun sights cycling powered equipment testing firing systems checking gas pressures and verifying that all the equipment that will be needed in an action is in his mount In twin mounts there will be a gun captain assigned to each gun assembly The gun captain usually stands on his foot high tool box welded to the mount s deck and offset from the gun s centerline see the man in black standing on the box in the MK21 open mount picture This places him high and aft of the rammer motor From there he can watch the actions of the powder man projectile man breech block and rammer He can verify that the gun returns to battery before the next round is loaded If something goes wrong he is free to move around his gun to fix the problem He knows everybody s job and can step in if necessary At the mount captain s command he manually opens the breech block before the first round is loaded and reports if the bore is clear 15 His duties are the same in automatic or local control Pointer Single Mount Elevation Indicator Regulator Controls the mount s elevation and firing He sits in the left front corner of the mount In front of him are his optical sight hand wheels and elevation drive controls To his right about elbow high is a large box called the Elevation Indicator Regulator pictured This box controls the elevation power drive Through a window on top of the box he sees a set of dials that indicate the elevation of the gun and the automatic elevation orders coming from the Fire Control System Above the Indicator Regulator is the Electrical Fire Select Switch It is a rotary switch with three positions Off Local and Auto Off disables the electrical firing system on the mount Local enables the electric firing key on his right hand wheel Auto enables the off mount electrical firing circuit from the Fire Control System Just outside his right knee is the Percussion Select Lever This mechanical lever has two positions Safe and Armed When it is in the armed position the mechanical linkage for percussion firing is enabled His right footrest is at one end of this linkage and the firing pin sear in the breech block is at the other By rocking his right foot forward he fires the gun Electrical firing is the primary firing method When the Mount Captain commands Match pointers Switch to Automatic he looks down at the dials on his Indicator Regulator The dials tell him the difference between the gun s present elevation and the ordered elevation electrically coming from the Fire Control System by synchro He changes the elevation of the gun by moving his hand wheels until the dial difference is zero His dials are now matched and he switches the elevation drive into Auto This disengages his hand wheels and gives elevation control to the Fire Control System Then he moves the Electrical Fire Select Switch to AUTO and reports back to the Mount Captain Elevation in auto He may now look through his sight and if the Sight Setter has matched the sight setter dial pointers he will see the target in the cross hairs When the Mount Captain commands Switch to Local he switches the elevation drive and the Electrical Fire Select Switch to local In local control he controls the gun s elevation with his hand wheels to keep his sight s horizontal cross hair on the target At the command of the Mount Captain he fires the gun by squeezing the firing key on his right hand wheel Trainer Single Mount Train Indicator RegulatorControls the mount s train angle bearing He sits in the right front corner of the mount see the far right man in the Mk21 open mount picture In front of him are his optical sight hand wheels and train drive controls Between his knees is a large box called the Train Indicator Regulator pictured This box controls the train power drive On top of the box is a window with a set of dials that indicate the train angle of the gun and the automatic train orders electrically coming from the Fire Control System by synchro When the Mount Captain commands Match pointers Switch to Automatic he looks down at the dials on his Indicator Regulator The dials also tell him the difference between the gun s present train angle and the ordered train angle He changes the bearing of the gun by moving his hand wheels until the dial difference is zero His dials are now matched and he switches the train drive into Auto This disengages his hand wheels and gives train angle control to the Fire Control System Then he reports back to the Mount Captain Train in auto He may now look through his sight and if the Sight Setter has matched the sight setter dial pointers he will see the target in the cross hairs When the Mount Captain commands Switch to Local he switches the train drive to local In local control he controls the gun s train angle with his hand wheels to keep his sight s vertical cross hair on the target Sight setter Single Mount Sight Setter Dials Operates the sight setting equipment In single mounts he stands just behind the trainer see the man with headphones in the Mk21 open mount picture while in twin mounts he sits between the guns just forward of the projectile hoists The sight setter moves the sights reticles relative to the barrel s axis In early open mounts this was done by moving the platforms to which the sights were bolted Sights in enclosed mounts have movable prisms in their optical paths 16 The sight setter has three dials and two hand cranks pictured The two right dials and right hand crank control the elevation reticle offset called Sight Angle 17 The upper right dial is scaled in minutes of arc and the lower right dial is in yards The left dial and hand crank control the reticle s left and right offset called Sight Deflection 18 and the dial is scaled in angular mils When the mount is in Automatic Control he turns his hand cranks to keep index marks on his dials matched to lines on the central disks of the dials These disks are electrically controlled by the Fire Control System by synchro 19 This is called matching the pointers 19 and it allows the sights to remain on the target while the mount is controlled by the Fire Control System In local control he takes sighting orders from the Mount Captain in yards of range and mils of deflection Fuze setter Single Mount Fuze setting Indicator RegulatorHe operates the equipment which sets the fuze time on projectiles with mechanical time fuzes On a single enclosed mount he sits below and just outboard of the Pointer s seat Under the Pointer s seat and in front the Fuse Setter is the Fuse Indicator Regulator pictured It is a box with a window a hand crank and a selector lever On a twin mount he and his Fuze Indicator Regulator sit next to the Sight Setter between the guns When the mount is put in Automatic control he flips the selector lever to Auto and this electrically powered Fuze Indicator Regulator automatically follows the fuze setting orders sent from the Fire Control System by synchro In Local Control he follows the Mount Captain s fuze orders by spinning the hand crank until the dials in the window read the correct fuze time Powder man Slides the primer protector off the powder case and then lifts the case from the powder scuttle at his feet to the gun s rammer tray Projectile man Moves the projectile from the hoist to the rammer tray in front of the just placed powder case and then he pulls the rammer lever to load the projectile and powder case into the chamber Hot case man When the gun fires he catches the ejected powder case and throws it out of the mount Check sight He verifies that the mount is aiming at the target Ammunition Edit Drawing of loaded Semi Fixed round This gun uses semi fixed ammunition Pictured 5 Also called Separated Ammunition 20 Each round consists of a projectile and a powder case The two parts of the round are kept separate until they get to the gun 12 At the gun they are first combined on the rammer tray and then power rammed into the chamber together with one ram cycle The powder case completely fills the volume of the chamber and its length seats the projectile s rotating band into the bore s rifling This is different from a naval bag gun In a bag gun 1 The projectile by itself is power rammed into the chamber until its rotating band is seated in the bore s rifling 2 The rammer is retracted 3 The powder bags are then rammed in 12 This is also different from some artillery field guns 1 The projectile is hand rammed into the chamber with a ramrod until its rotating band is seated in the bore s rifling 2 The ramrod is retracted 3 Next powder is placed in the chamber either as a bag or primed canister with the required charge Note that the single ram operation used in semi fixed guns decreases the loading time and therefore increases the firing rate on medium and large caliber guns For example each of the nine 8 203 mm 55 caliber Rapid Fire guns installed on the Des Moines class cruiser used auto loaded semi fixed ammunition and had a firing rate of 10 to 12 rounds a minute 2 See also the 8 55 caliber Mark 71 gun 5 rounds were often used as weights for burials at sea Projectile Edit 5 38cal Anti Aircraft Common AAC projectile The Projectile pictured has three major parts the body the fuze and the explosive charge 5 Projectile bodyThe body is basically a machined steel tube with an ogive shape at one end At the ogive and rear ends are threaded openings used to the install the shell s filler and hold the fuzes Around the tube near the base is a copper alloy ring called the Rotating Band This band has a diameter larger than the bore and when the projectile and powder case are rammed into the chamber the band is jammed into the grooves of the bore s rifling It forms a gas seal between the projectile and the bore Also as the projectile travels down the barrel the band grips the rifling to impart spin to the projectile 21 FuzeThe Fuse detonates the projectile to cause maximum damage to the target Different targets required different fuzes The safety requirements of a fuze are that 5 33 it is safe to handle i e It will not arm if dropped rolled or shaken 5 33 it remains unarmed in the bore and until the projectile is well clear of the firing ship to protect exposed personnel 5 33 Therefore when the gun is fired the following events take place 14 000g acceleration 5 34 from the burning propellant in the bore This acceleration is used to setback i e Force to the rear 5 34 some fuze parts from unarmed to armed positions due to their inertia Centrifugal force from the 12 360 rpm 5 34 projectile rotation This force causes other parts to move outward 5 34 7 2g deceleration 5 34 from aerodynamic drag after the projectile leaves the muzzle Due to inertia other movable parts will creep 5 34 forward All of these events must take place in the correct order to arm the fuze List of fuze types 5 Mechanical time fuze A nose time fuze that detonates the shell after an adjustable time interval has elapsed since firing 22 Base detonating fuze A base impact fuze screwed into the rear of a projectile to protect the fuze during impact It delays the shell s detonation about 25 ms after impact allowing the projectile to penetrate the target prior to detonation 5 Point detonating fuze A nose impact fuze Very fast detonation on the surface of the target VT fuze The VT Variable Time this is a counter espionage decoy designation fuze is a proximity fuze 23 It is a nose electronic fuze that does not require impact to trigger 24 Designed to detonate close to the target It was originally intended to be used against air targets Now it is also used in shore bombardment and surface actions against fast boats This is because the VT fuze has proved well suited for bursting the shell at the correct distance above the ground or water for maximum damage to lightly armored targets over a large area 25 Auxiliary detonating fuze In the projectile drawing an Auxiliary Detonating Fuze is screwed onto the bottom of the Mechanical Time Fuze This is because the time fuze primer does not have enough explosive shock to detonate the relatively insensitive Explosive D The Auxiliary fuze uses an intermediate explosive that is set off by the time fuze primer and in turn sets off the Explosive D 5 5 38 cal projectiles 5 2 Body label Full name DescriptionAA Anti aircraft A high capacity fragmenting shell with a nose mechanical time fuzeAAC Anti aircraft common A medium penetrating shell with a mechanical time fuze and a base detonating fuze Designed to be used on either aircraft or lightly armored ships For aircraft the time fuze is set to explode the shell just before it reaches the target The detonation shock wave and the expanding cone of shrapnel increases the chance of target destruction For vessels the time fuze is left on safe and the base detonating fuze will explode the shell 25 milliseconds after impact AAVT Anti aircraft VT A high capacity fragmenting shell with a VT proximity fuze AP Armor piercing A thick walled penetrating projectile with a base detonating fuze The explosive charge is usually Explosive D because it is less sensitive to impact 5 SS Star shell A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze Packed inside is a flare attached to a parachute When the fuze fires a small black powder charge expels the flare and parachute out the back Before radar star shells were used to illuminate the target at night They are still used in support of troops at night or illumination of an at sea rescue WP White phosphorus A thin walled shell with a point detonating fuze used for smoke screens It also has some incendiary effect AA non frag Anti Aircraft non fragmentation A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze and packed with a smoke producing chemical that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge It is used in practice anti aircraft shoots AAVT non frag Anti Aircraft VT non fragmentation A thin walled shell with a VT fuze and packed with a smoke producing chemical that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge It is used in practice anti aircraft shoots BL Blind load A shell without a fuze and filled with sand It is used in practice surface shoots W Window A thin walled shell with a mechanical time fuze and packed with strips of metal foil that is ejected out the rear by a small black powder charge It is used to confuse enemy radar Powder case Edit 5 38cal Full Service Charge The powder case is a brass or steel alloy cylinder closed at one end It holds the propelling charge and a case combination primer The charge is held packed around the primer by a wad distance piece not in clearing charge and plug 26 When rammed in the chamber with the projectile the Full and Reduced charge cases are designed to completely fill the volume of the chamber from the breechblock face to the base of the projectile when its rotating band is jammed into the bore s rifling 5 In other words the powder case acts a rammer extension for the projectile There are three types of powder cases Full service charge pictured A 26 7 inch 679 mm long 12 3 pound 5 6 kg brass case with 15 5 pounds 7 0 kg of smokeless or flashless used at night powder 2 The Full Service Charge new gun initial velocity is 2 600 ft s 790 m s 2 It is used in surface and anti aircraft actions 5 dd Reduced chargeThe Reduced Charge uses the same case as the Full Service Charge but with only 3 6 pounds 1 6 kg of powder and a longer distance piece 2 The Reduced Charge new gun initial velocity is 1 200 ft s 370 m s 2 It is used in shore bombardment to lob shells like a mortar over obstacles to hit targets on the opposite side and for propelling star shells at a lower velocity to protect the parachute from being shredded while it is deployed 5 dd Clearing charge Pictured 5 38cal Clearing Charge The clearing charge also called the short round is a short case plugged just above the wad 20 The distance piece between the wad and plug is left out Its powder charge is less than a full service charge 20 This case is essential for the safety of the mount because it is needed to clear a gun after a misfire 20 Due to its importance it is kept in a special container in the mount whenever the ship is in a combat zone A misfire is especially dangerous in semi fixed guns 12 When the breech is opened after the misfire the faulty powder case can be extracted but the projectile will remain jammed in the rifling 20 Also all or part of the extracted case s cork plug may still be wedged in the chamber behind the projectile This fouls the chamber because it decreases the chamber s volume And since Full and Reduced charge cases take up the full volume of an unfouled chamber see loaded Semi Fixed round drawing above any residue left from the previously extracted case will prevent them from fully loading into the chamber Therefore the clearing charge is made short so that it will fit into a fouled chamber dd After hand extracting the bad case from the chamber the clearing charge is removed from its special container and is hand rammed into the chamber With the clearing charge sealed in the chamber the projectile is fired out the muzzle 12 It is important to clear the projectile through the muzzle because it is not easy nor safe pushing a bore rod down the barrel to force a fuzed projectile back through the chamber and into the gun house 27 Also if the gun has fired a number of rounds just prior to the misfire time is critical because the barrel may be hot enough to cook off the high explosive in the projectile 28 This would destroy the mount 12 dd Deployment Edit to be moved to a suitable page Ships launched with 5 inch 38 gunsAircraft carriers 3 Yorktown class 8 Wasp 8 24 Essex class 12Escort Carriers 50 Casablanca class 1 19 Commencement Bay class 2Battleships 2 North Carolina class 20 3 of 4 South Dakota class 20 South Dakota 16 4 Iowa class 20Heavy cruisers Wichita 8 14 Baltimore class 12 3 Oregon City class 12 3 Des Moines class 12Light cruisers 2 Brooklyn class 8 4 Atlanta class 16 4 Atlanta Oakland 12 27 Cleveland class 12 2 Fargo class 12 3 Juneau class 12Destroyers 8 Farragut class 5 8 Porter class 8 18 Mahan class 5 4 Gridley class 4 8 Bagley class 4 5 Somers class 8 10 Benham class 4 12 Sims class 5 6 Benson class 5 24 repeat Bensons 4 18 Gleaves class 5 48 repeat Gleaves 4 175 Fletcher class 5 58 Allen M Sumner class 6 12 Robert H Smith class 6 98 Gearing class 6Destroyer escorts 22 Rudderow class 2 50 Rudderow APDs 1 83 John C Butler class 2 6 Buckley class launched as APDs 1Attack Transports 7 of 328 Type C2 ship 3 Ormsby class 2 4 Sumter class 2Attack Cargo 74 of 328 Type C2 ship Alhena AKA 9 1 11 Arcturus class 1 32 Tolland class 1 30 Andromeda class 1See also EditList of naval guns List of naval anti aircraft guns Naval gunfireWeapons of comparable role performance and era Edit QF 4 7 inch Mark XI gun British equivalent dual purpose gun QF 4 5 inch Mk I V naval gun British equivalent dual purpose gun 12 7 cm SK C 34 naval gun German equivalent limited to low angle fire 12 8 cm FlaK 40 Dedicated anti aircraft land based German gun of equal calibre 130 mm 50 B13 Pattern 1936 Soviet equivalent naval and coastal gun Canon de 138 mm Modele 1929 French equivalent naval gun 120 mm naval gun Italian equivalent naval gun 12 7 cm 50 Type 3 naval gun Japanese equivalent naval gun mounted on most destroyers and competitive against surface targets 10 cm 65 Type 98 naval gun Japanese naval gun mounted on Akizuki class destroyers aircraft carrier Taihō and light cruiser Ōyodo competitive in the anti aircraft roleWeapons of comparable role in successive U S Navy service Edit 5 54 caliber Mark 16 gun 1945 5 54 caliber Mark 42 gun 1953 5 54 caliber Mark 45 gun 1971Notes Edit 106 Archived from the original on 7 December 2021 Retrieved 13 October 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r DiGiulian Tony February 2013 United States of America 5 38 12 7 cm Mark 12 navweaps com Retrieved 2 March 2018 Gridley June 1937 marks the introduction of the base ring mount in the main line of destroyers The last 2 Mahan class ships also had them Dunlap was commissioned in June 1937 too Porter entered service much sooner a Bore diameter greater than 4 inches 102 mm and less than 8 inches 203 mm a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington D C U S Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 Naval Weapons of WW2 Campbell P106 DiGiulian Tony November 2006 United States of America 5 38 127 mm Mark 12 navweaps com Retrieved 2 March 2018 Pedestal and other mounts lacking integral hoists 12 15 rounds per minute Naval Weapons of WW2 Campbell P139 DiGiulian Tony November 2006 United States of America 5 38 12 7 cm Mark 12 navweaps com Retrieved 2 March 2018 The earliest mountings as sic used on USS Farragut DD 348 were pedestal mounts with shell and cartridge hoists located on the deck behind the gun mount What this article calls the rammer spade is called the power spade in the gun assembly picture and is parenthetically called the shell guard in the rammer tray illustration This is probably the result of different Navy documents written by different people at different times Ultimately it became the rammer spade as shown in the rammer tray illustration This is because it looked like a small leather covered garden spade and it was what rammed the round into the chamber Action Report 24 August 1942 cv6 org Retrieved 1 July 2022 a b c d e f g Gunner s Mate 3 Vol 1 NAVPERS 10158 A Washington DC US GPO 1952 Franklin Bruce Hampton 1999 The Buckley class Destroyer Escorts Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 280 3 p 34 Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 Approximately 27 men are required to man all stations in the mount and the upper handling room a b How the 5 38 crews operated Retrieved 2 March 2018 Naval Ordnance and Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 Movable prism type telescopes are mounted at the pointer s checker s and trainer s stations Gunner s Mate 3 Vol 1 NAVPERS 10158 A Washington DC US GPO 1952 p 32 Gunner s Mate 3 Vol 1 NAVPERS 10158 A Washington DC US GPO 1952 p 38 a b Gunner s Mate 3 Vol 1 NAVPERS 10158 A Washington DC US GPO 1952 p 66 a b c d e Definitions and Information about Naval Guns Part 2 Ammunition Fuzes Projectiles and Propellants Retrieved 2 March 2018 Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 p 29 The three primary functions of the rotating band are to seal the bore to position and center the rear end of the projectile and to impart rotation to the projectile Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC U S Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 time fuzes are clockwork mechanisms used to obtain timed air bursts Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 The radio proximity or VT fuze is used in all of the types of projectiles which can use mechanical time fuzes Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 Point detonating time and VT fuzes may all be called nose fuzes Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 VT fuzed ammunition is very effective on exposed personnel and lightly armored targets Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 In 40 mm and larger guns a cardboard disc or wad is forced into the case and a distance piece if one is needed placed on top Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 Whether a gun is hot or cold the risks attendant upon removing a loaded and fuzed projectile seated in the bore by backing out are considered unwarranted Naval Ordnance And Gunnery Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NAVPERS 10797 A 1957 ed Washington DC US Navy Bureau of Naval Personnel 1957 A loaded and fuzed projectile seated in the bore of a gun that is hot from previous firing presents a hazard since detonation of the projectile is possible as a result of being heated External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 5 38 caliber gun Detailed description and history 5 38 including ammunition and Mark data Illustrated descriptions of MK 30 amp MK 38 list of ammunition for all Marks Illustrated description of MK 38 Illustrated Operating Instructions for MK XXI model Photos of 5 38 ammunition Naval Ordnance and Gunnery 1957 Volume 1 Naval Ordnance NavPers 10797 A Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 5 inch 38 caliber gun amp oldid 1166628297, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.