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BL 6 inch gun Mk XII
HMS Warspite 6 inch gun casemate closeup
Starboard forward casemate gun on HMS Warspite after the Battle of Jutland
Type Naval gun
Place of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1914 - 1945
Used by British Empire
Wars World War I World War II
Production history
Designer Vickers
Designed 1913
Manufacturer Vickers
No. built 463
Specifications
Mass 15,512 pounds (7,036 kg) barrel & breech[1]
Barrel length 270 inches (6.858 m) bore (45 cal)[2]

Shell 100 pounds (45.36 kg) Lyddite, Armour-piercing, Shrapnel[3]
Calibre 6 inches (152.4 mm)
Breech Welin interrupted screw
Recoil Hydro-spring, 16.5 inches (420 mm)[4]
Elevation -7° - 30°[5]
Muzzle velocity 2,825 feet per second (861 m/s)[6]
Maximum firing range 19,660 metres (21,500 yd)[7]

The BL 6 inch Gun Mark XII[8] was a British 45 calibres naval gun which was mounted as primary armament on light cruisers and secondary armament on dreadnought battleships commissioned in the period 1914 - 1926, and remained in service on many warships until the end of World War II.

Design[]

BL 6 inch Mk XII gun barrel diagram

This was a high-velocity naval gun consisting of inner "A" tube, "A" tube, wound with successive layers of steel wire, with a jacket over the wire.[9]

Naval service[]

HMS Enterprise 6-inch gun clip 1936 LOC matpc 20251

Single gun on CP mounting on cruiser Enterprise

HMS Enterprise 1936 twin 6 inch gun turret LOC matpc 20229

Experimental twin turret on HMS Enterprise, seen in 1936, which formed the prototype for twin 6-inch turrets on Leander and Arethusa-class cruisers

HMS Malaya 6 inch casemate gun cre 1943 IWM A 16964

Gunners load a casemate gun on battleship HMS Malaya, May 1943. The men at left carry cordite cartridges, still in their storage cases, on their shoulders

It superseded the 45-calibres Mk VII gun and the longer 50-calibres Mk XI gun which had proved unwieldy in light cruisers due to its length, and was Britain's most modern 6-inch naval gun when World War I began.

Guns were mounted in the following ships :

Coast defence gun[]

During WWII some Mk XII guns were used in emergency coast defense batteries.[10]

Notable actions[]

Ammunition[]

This gun generated a higher pressure in the chamber on firing compared to preceding 6-inch guns such as Mk VII and Mk XI. This necessitated use of special shells capable of withstanding a pressure of 20 tons per square inch on firing, which had "Q" suffixed to the name. World War I shells were marked "A.Q." denoting special 4 C.R.H. shells for this gun.[1]

See also[]

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era[]

Surviving examples[]

Notes and references[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Handbook, 1917, Page 5
  2. Handbook, 1917, Page 7
  3. 100 lb shells : Treatise on Ammunition, 1915
  4. Handbook, 1917, Page 6, 23-26
  5. 30° elevation was possible with P.XIII mountings used on light cruisers; 20° elevation was possible on some P.VII* mountings used on light cruisers; 14° elevation was possible with P.IX mountings used on battleships; 15° was possible with P.VII mountings used on light cruisers. Handbook, 1917, Pages 5, 31, 41, Plates 6, 24, 35
  6. 2,825 feet per second using 27 lb 2 oz cordite MD size 19 propellant was the figure used in range tables. New guns were quoted with a muzzle velocity of 2,845 feet per second. Handbook, 1917, Page 5
  7. http://navalhistory.flixco.info/H/54676x53535/8330/a0.htm
  8. Mark XII = Mark 12 : Britain denoted Marks (models) of guns with Roman numerals until after World War II. This was the twelfth model of British BL 6-inch gun.
  9. Handbook, 1917, page 5, 6
  10. http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNBR_6-45_mk12.htm

Bibliography[]

External links[]



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