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The 12.8 cm SK C/34 was used on the Type 34, Type 36 and Type 36B destroyers as well as the sloop Grille, the training ship Bremse and the torpedo boats Leopard and Luchs. They were also intended for the unbuilt Type 38B destroyers, Type 40 torpedo-boats and the Type XI U-boats. These guns were either mounted on single hand worked MPLC/34 ...
BL 4 inch Mk VIII & XI 40-caliber United Kingdom: World War I - World War II 102 mm (4.0 in) BL 4 inch Mk IX naval gun 45-caliber United Kingdom: World War I - World War II 102 mm (4.0 in) QF 4 inch Mk I - III 40-caliber United Kingdom: 1895 - World War I 102 mm (4.0 in) QF 4 inch Mk IV, XII, XXII 40-caliber United Kingdom
5"/38 caliber gun: US Navy single/dual purpose shipboard 127 mm heavy anti-aircraft gun firing a slightly lighter shell, used on many U.S. Navy ships built during World War II [citation needed] References
41 cm/45 3rd Year Type - Japanese 41 cm gun mounted in the Nagato-class battleships. 14"/36 cm/45 41st Year Type - Japanese 35.6 cm gun used on the Ise-, Fusō- and Kongō-class battleships. Type 41 12-inch 45 caliber naval gun; Type 41 12-inch (305 mm)/40-caliber naval gun; Type 41 10 inch 45 caliber naval gun; 10 in/40 Type 41 naval gun
C. Cannon 76/40 Model 1916; Cannon 102/35 Model 1914; Cannone da 75/46 C.A. modello 34; Cannone da 75/27 A.V. Cannone da 76/45 S 1911; Cannone da 90/53; Cannone-Mitragliera da 20/77 (Scotti) Cannone-Mitragliera da 37/54 (Breda) Canon de 75 CA modèle 1940 Schneider; Canon de 75 antiaérien mle 1913–1917; Canon de 90 mm Modèle 1926
Caliber: 128 millimetres (5.0 in) Breech: semi-automatic horizontal sliding-block: Recoil: Hydro-pneumatic: Carriage: cruciform (some were split trail) Elevation: −7° 51' to +45° 27' Traverse: 360° (some were about 90°, or less) Rate of fire: 10–12 rounds per minute 12.8 cm Pak 44; 3 rounds per minute 12.8 cm Pak 80; Muzzle velocity ...
The 50-caliber 12.7 cm (5.0 in) Type 3 gun was of built-up construction, originally with three and later two layers with the usual breech ring and breech bush. [4] It used a Welin interrupted screw breech and powder bags, unusual for guns of that caliber. The shell was fuzed manually on the loading tray before being rammed by hand and could ...
As a result, the new light cruiser Emden, the three Königsberg-class cruisers and the heavy cruiser Deutschland were equipped by the now completely obsolete 8.8 cm SK L/45 C/13. Eventually these guns were replaced by the new 8.8 cm SK C/31 naval gun, 8.8 cm SK C/32 naval gun or the 10.5 cm Flak 38, with most ships being refitted by 1939. [6]