enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gun turret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_turret

    A gun turret (or simply turret) is a mounting platform from which weapons can be fired that affords protection, visibility and ability to turn and aim. A modern gun turret is generally a rotatable weapon mount that houses the crew or mechanism of a projectile-firing weapon and at the same time lets the weapon be aimed and fired in some degree ...

  3. Casemate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casemate

    Although the main armament of ships quickly began to be mounted in revolving gun turrets, secondary batteries continued to be mounted in casemates; however, several disadvantages eventually also led to their replacement by turrets. In tanks that do not have a turret for the main gun, the structure that accommodates the gun is also called a ...

  4. Cowper Phipps Coles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowper_Phipps_Coles

    Sherard Osborn Cowper-Coles (son) Edmund Lyons, 1st Baron Lyons (uncle in-law) Captain Cowper Phipps Coles, C.B., R.N. (1819 – 7 September 1870), was an English naval captain with the Royal Navy. Coles was also an inventor; in 1859, he was the first to patent a design for a revolving gun turret. Upon appealing for public support, his turrets ...

  5. Weapon mount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weapon_mount

    A gun turret protects the crew or mechanism of a weapon and at the same time lets the weapon be aimed and fired in many directions.. A turret is a rotating weapon platform, strictly one that crosses the armour of whatever it is mounted on with a structure called a barbette (on ships) or basket (on tanks) and has a protective structure on top (gunhouse).

  6. Turret ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turret_ship

    The gun turret was independently invented by the Swedish inventor John Ericsson in the United States. [4] Ericsson designed USS Monitor in 1861. Erickson's most prominent design feature was a large cylindrical gun turret mounted amidships above the low-freeboard upper hull, also called the "raft". The raft extended well past the sides of the ...

  7. Barbette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbette

    When applied to military aircraft, largely in aviation history books written by British historians [citation needed], a barbette is a position on an aircraft where a gun is in a mounting which has a restricted arc of fire when compared to a turret, or which is remotely mounted away from the gunner.

  8. King George V-class battleship (1939) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_George_V-class...

    The second forward turret was changed to a smaller two-gun turret in exchange for better armour protection, reducing the broadside weight to below that of the nine gun arrangement. [75] The 14-inch Armour Piercing (AP) shell also carried a proportionally large bursting charge of 39.8 lb (18.1 kg).

  9. Gun laying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_laying

    Gun laying. Gun laying is the process of aiming an artillery piece or turret, such as a gun, howitzer, or mortar, on land, at sea, or in air, against surface or aerial targets. It may be laying for either direct fire, where the gun is aimed directly at a target within the line-of-sight of the user, or by indirect fire, where the gun is not ...