689:
582:
531:
292:
590:
671:
602:
use led the army to design a single gun mounting in two marks, both with an underground engine room to provide electrical and hydraulic power for traverse, elevation, fuze setting, ramming and other tasks. Fitted with the standard army
Machine Fuze Setter No 10, these guns had a rate of fire of 10 rds/min and a maximum height of 50,000 ft, with an effective height of 36,000 ft. Mark 1A was a mild steel turret for anti-aircraft use only, Mk 1B was an armoured turret for anti aircraft and coast defence use. The gun was designated Mk 2.
714:
42:
424:...the ship's company closed to action-stations and gave a demonstration of the cruiser's firepower to the army officers... in the form of a low angle barrage. Set to burst at 2000 yds range, a terrific barrage was put up for two minutes and we fired some two hundred rounds of 5.25-inch HE...A wall of bursting shell was thrown up just above sea level and I could see that the army officers were impressed...
1118:
Routledge 1994, page 87, 78. "Effective height" was the greatest at which a 400 mph target could be engaged for 30 seconds using
Predictor No. 10 (the all-electric US Bell AAA Computer) : hence with a realistic prospect of damaging the target. The shell could travel up to 50,000 ft but
408:
they fulfil the combined functions of H.A. Long Range
Armament and Secondary Armament against surface craft. The 5.25 in. calibre with separate ammunition is used for dual High Angle and Low Angle Armament, since it gives the reasonable maximum weight of shell which can be loaded by the average gun's
605:
By the end of 1943 only 16 of the new guns had been installed, far below projections. By the end of the war 164 guns had been produced. The high-explosive shells were fuzed with the standard army No 208 mechanical time fuze, used with 3.7 and 4.5-inch anti-aircraft guns. The guns remained in service
862:
A 270-knot (500 km/h; 310 mph) target crossing the line of sight at right angles, at 2,000 yd (1,800 m) range, will move across the line of sight at 4.5 degrees per second. This simple fact of geometry appears to contradict the assertion that a 10-degree-per-second traverse rate
601:
In early 1942 the
Governor of Gibraltar sought 5.25-in guns for dual anti-aircraft/coast defence role. None was forthcoming. However, later that year Anti-Aircraft Command in UK acquired three twin-gun turrets from the Admiralty, which were installed around London in permanent positions. Trials and
502:
guided missile. According to postwar publications the gunhouses were cramped, and the heavy projectile and cartridge cases resulted in a reduced sustained rate of fire to seven or eight rounds per minute rather than the designed twelve rounds per minute. However, these factors do not appear to have
510:
s rate of fire, over a one-minute period, which was typical for a World War II AA engagement. The dual-mount turrets 10 deg/s traversal speed was considered too slow to engage higher-speed aircraft at close range. Nevertheless, these elevation and traverse rates were still higher than some
305:
Unlike its French and
Italian contemporaries of similar size the QF 5.25-inch gun was designed as dual-purpose equipment capable of engaging both aircraft and surface targets. Combining the secondary and heavy anti-aircraft armament allowed a significant weight savings for the
947:
Sired, Enemy
Engaged, p23, states: "The Italians did not press home their attacks very hard and I thought they had a lot to put up with, as each (10 × 5.25 in gun) cruiser could fire 100 rounds of 5.25" HE shell per minute..." Ronald Sired was a gunnery petty officer on board
317:
limit of 35,000 tons. The gun fired an 80 lb (36 kg) shell, which was considered the largest that a gun crew could easily handle while still having the rate of fire needed for anti-aircraft use. In 1944,
648:
Penetration: side armour: 3 inches (76 mm) 9,500 yards (8,690 m) or 11,900 m, depending on the sources; the gun was not capable of penetrating 2 inches (51 mm) of deck armour at any
1093:, p 32: Diagram of High Level Bomber Attack: A 240 mph target, at 12 thousand feet altitude could expect to be under for fire about 75 seconds, from the time it enters the effective range of the
362:-class anti-aircraft cruisers mounted the 5.25-inch gun in the Remote Power Control RP10 Mk II mountings, which offered much-improved training and elevating speeds. The number of turrets on the
428:
The ballistic performance of the QF 5.25 was very good, with a maximum range of 24,070 yd (22,010 m) at 45 degrees with an 80 lb (36 kg) HE shell. In comparison, the French
1097:
until it flies to within the minimum range of a 5.25 gun elevated to 70 degrees. A Tribal-class destroyer would be able to engage the same target for about 37 seconds.
688:
2247:
366:
class were reduced from five to four and the number of light AA guns were increased. The RP10 Mk II mountings were also later used to replace the Mk I mountings on
1469:
1550:
1486:
1477:
1325:
833:
was not decommissioned until 1966, although she appears to have ended "active service" some years before. All other ships were decommissioned by 1962 except
1482:
1346:
2267:
388:-class ships, although the width between the guns remained the same. A slightly more powerful Mk II variant was also deployed by the British Army as an
1473:
1834:
732:
1171:
Garzke & Dulin, p291: " The guns were fully automatic and remotely controlled, with a rate of fire of eighteen rounds per minute."
2242:
1318:
2129:
955:. The accuracy of Sired's account was praised by Captain FC Flynn RN. Official Historian of the Naval Campaigns in the Mediterranean
670:
473:
1160:
551:
307:
613:, seven guns were mounted in Australia and three in New Guinea, in enclosed single-gun anti-aircraft/coast defence turrets.
1569:
1535:
1505:
1311:
454:
cruisers had a maximum range of 21,435 yd (19,600 m) at 45 degrees with a 72.1 lb (32.7 kg) AP shell.
2180:
2014:
1627:
1525:
1434:
784:
351:
2216:
2252:
1827:
1279:
1254:
1240:
1222:
1155:
DW Spethman, "The garrison guns of
Australia 1788-1962", pages 145-6. Published by Ron H Mortensen, Inala Qld, 2008.
483:-class cruisers were lost to air attack, although four were sunk by submarine or surface-launched torpedoes. However
446:
had a maximum range of 21,872 yd (20,000 m) at 30 degrees with an 88 lb (40 kg) SAP shell. The
1801:
1681:
1530:
17:
1676:
409:
crew for sustained periods at all angles of elevation. The maximum rate of fire should be 10-12 rounds per minute.
2114:
1770:
1691:
1607:
1686:
2155:
1559:
1500:
796:
658:
Training & elevating speeds: 10 degrees per second and 20 degrees per second respectively, in RP10 mounts.
429:
2045:
1632:
1303:
1298:
750:
451:
1979:
1956:
1820:
1459:
802:
447:
196:
2221:
2211:
2185:
2175:
2170:
2160:
1884:
1540:
1454:
1408:
1403:
1374:
581:
54:
1894:
1739:
2262:
2165:
1899:
1622:
1520:
1515:
1449:
1444:
719:
530:
516:
283:. Although considered less than completely successful, it saw extensive service. 267 guns were built.
107:
678:
479:
when Force Z was attacked by
Japanese aircraft, due to factors unrelated to the guns' performance. No
2257:
2190:
1994:
1696:
1510:
1384:
1379:
1355:
522:
1617:
1429:
1299:
Our Navy in Action; newsreel video of 5.25-inch guns engaging Axis aircraft and
Italian battleships
458:
259:
Naval: 24,070 yd (22,010 m) at 45 degrees with HE shell at 2,672 ft/s (814 m/s)
249:
Naval: 23,400 yd (21,400 m) at 45 degrees with HE shell at 2,600 ft/s (790 m/s)
626:
177:
2206:
2150:
1843:
1812:
1749:
1653:
1495:
437:
314:
2109:
1989:
1951:
1946:
1925:
1889:
1602:
296:
291:
214:
589:
2094:
1920:
1915:
1874:
1864:
1765:
1744:
1597:
1579:
1790:
1785:
1780:
1775:
790:
319:
2019:
2009:
1999:
1961:
1713:
1658:
1587:
1334:
8:
1106:
2124:
2073:
2024:
1008:
996:
766:
559:
344:
330:
322:
shells became available, making the gun significantly more effective against aircraft.
189:
1208:
1180:
1067:
979:
887:
1984:
1879:
1869:
1718:
1275:
1250:
1236:
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949:
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827:
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567:
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414:
393:
374:
2119:
2068:
1612:
1592:
1564:
484:
280:
272:
66:
2063:
2055:
2004:
1941:
834:
778:
743:
512:
373:. The last of the Royal Navy's battleships which was commissioned after the war,
337:
234:
103:
47:
713:
1723:
850:
367:
1333:
1265:
2236:
2104:
2099:
2040:
1420:
1394:
389:
1272:
History of the Royal
Regiment of Artillery – Anti-Aircraft Artillery 1914–55
380:, had MK I turrets with enlarged gun houses compared to those fitted to the
1850:
1365:
1338:
610:
594:
224:
117:
1286:
Enemy engaged : a naval rating with the Mediterranean fleet, 1942–44
1228:
585:
Twin naval anti-aircraft mounting at Primrose Hill, London, August 1943
276:
170:
121:
99:
2089:
1846:
1648:
1046:
853:
to denote "Marks" (i.e. models) of ordnance until after World War II.
723:
606:
after World War II, and in 1953 11 guns were installed in Gibraltar.
443:
726:, the only intact battery of 5.25-inch AA guns anywhere in the world
1203:
British Naval Guns 1880–1945 No 14" article in "Warship Volume VIII
1842:
772:
41:
1668:
754:
204:
1215:
British, Soviet, French, and Dutch Battleships of World War II.
329:
class and in Mk II twin mountings on nine of the first eleven
1795:
1197:
Nelson to Vanguard: Warship Design and Development 1923–1945
1028:
1026:
354:
due to shortages of the 5.25-inch gun. The last five of the
1119:
with little tracking capability, hence little effectiveness.
325:
The 5.25-inch gun was carried in Mk I twin mountings by the
1094:
1023:
53:. The empty cartridge cases from firing in support of the
909:
907:
593:
A single gun of the 801st AA & Coast Arty Battery in
641:
Rate of Fire: Sustained 7–8 rpm, 18 RPM claimed for HMS
1213:
Garzke, William H., Jr.; Dulin, Robert O., Jr. (1980).
1047:"Medium Calibre guns of the Royal Navy in World War II"
793:, the main US Navy dual-purpose gun during World War II
904:
781:, German heavy anti-aircraft gun firing lighter shell
638:
Anti Aircraft Ceiling: 46,500 ft (14,170 m)
404:
The RN Gunnery Pocket Book published in 1945 states:
883:
881:
879:
787:, the Royal Navy's medium-calibre dual-purpose gun
157:Barrel & breech: 9,616 lb (4,362 kg)
876:
2248:World War II naval weapons of the United Kingdom
2234:
1247:The Gunners – A History of Australian Artillery
773:Weapons of comparable role, performance and era
635:Range: 24,070 yds (22,000 m) at 45 degrees
468:, escorting a convoy to Malta under, but later
176:Bore: 21 ft 10.5 in (6.67 m) 50
897:
895:
515:twin mounts carried on the German battleships
1828:
1319:
622:Bore Diameter: 5.25 inches (133 mm)
336:anti-aircraft cruisers, the exceptions being
313:battleships, which were designed to meet the
863:was too slow to track a high-speed aircraft.
1068:"Britain 5.25"/50 (13.4 cm) QF Mark I"
892:
2268:Military equipment introduced in the 1930s
1835:
1821:
1326:
1312:
1284:Sired, Ronald; edited by Flynn, F.C. 1957
652:Mounting weight: 78.7 metric tons (varied)
547:Ships with QF 5.25 inch Mark I guns:
977:
472:was overwhelmed and sunk while operating
165:Total: 22 ft 11.5 in (7 m)
735:remains overlooking the sea at Gibraltar
712:
632:Shell weight: 80 lbs (36.3 kg)
588:
580:
529:
420:demonstration firing her main armament:
290:
241:Army AA: 2,800 ft/s (850 m/s)
14:
2235:
1261:Jane's Battleships of the 20th Century
1816:
1307:
1062:
1060:
708:
655:Mounting elevation: -5 to +70 degrees
534:Inside a 5.25-inch gun turret on HMS
239:Naval: 2,672 ft/s (814 m/s)
1080:Garzke&Dullin, 1980. pp. 228–229
1044:
978:DiGiulian, Tony (29 January 2022).
901:Campbell, Naval Weapons of WW2, p44
805:, Italian naval gun of similar size
498:), was sunk at anchor in 1944 by a
457:The QF 5.25 guns performed well on
24:
1249:. Allen & Unwin: St Leonards.
1057:
799:, French naval gun of similar size
511:contemporary weapons, such as the
261:AA: 46,500 ft (14,200 m)
251:AA: 36,000 ft (11,000 m)
25:
2279:
2134:
1791:5-inch 51 caliber Mark 8 gun (US)
1786:4-inch 50 caliber Mark 9 gun (US)
1292:
1233:Allied Artillery of World War Two
1146:Routledge pg 77, 92,204, 207, 432
616:
2243:Naval guns of the United Kingdom
2212:BL 12-inch Mk V railway howitzer
797:Canon de 138 mm Modèle 1929
687:
669:
399:
246:Effective firing range
40:
2207:BL 9.2-inch Mk XIII railway gun
1270:Routledge, Brigadier NW. 1994.
1189:
1174:
1165:
1149:
1140:
1131:
1122:
1112:
1100:
1083:
1074:
1038:
1014:
1002:
997:Model 1934 and Model 1934 R1938
990:
971:
856:
576:
542:
2166:BL 6-inch Mk VII & Mk XXIV
1654:.50 Vickers Mk III machine gun
1603:QF 2-pounder "pom-pom" Mk VIII
1051:Military Guns & Ammunition
980:"5.25"/50 (13.4 cm) QF Mark I"
958:
941:
925:
916:
843:
821:
295:QF 5.25-inch Mark I turret on
256:Maximum firing range
13:
1:
2217:BL 13.5-inch Mk V railway gun
1235:. The Crowood Press: London.
1183:gives 3 inches at 9,500 yards
809:
738:a turret originally from PNS
662:
1980:BL 4.5-inch medium field gun
870:
803:135 mm /45 Italian naval gun
681:(semi armour-piercing) shell
413:A wartime account describes
7:
2222:BL 18-inch railway howitzer
1798:depth charge projector (US)
1570:QF 4-inch Mk XII & XXII
1536:QF 4.7-inch Mk IX & XII
760:
718:A preserved 5.25-in gun at
625:Barrel Length: 6.668 m (50
199:, 80 pounds (36.29 kg)
55:Allied invasion of Normandy
10:
2284:
2046:3.7-inch mountain howitzer
1781:3-inch 50 caliber gun (US)
1776:3-inch 23 caliber gun (US)
751:Pakistan Navy Headquarters
430:138 mm (5.4 in)
108:Royal Australian Artillery
2199:
2143:
2082:
2054:
2033:
1970:
1934:
1908:
1857:
1758:
1732:
1705:
1667:
1641:
1578:
1560:QF 12-pounder 12 cwt Mk V
1549:
1501:QF 12-pounder 12 cwt Mk V
1468:
1417:
1393:
1364:
1345:
1107:10.5 cm/65 (4.1") SK C/33
494:-class cruiser (Improved
286:
255:
245:
233:
223:
213:
203:
188:
183:
169:
161:
153:
148:
140:
132:
127:
113:
95:
85:
80:
73:Place of origin
72:
62:
39:
32:
2253:Naval anti-aircraft guns
1935:Field guns and howitzers
840:which served until 1985.
814:
702:with shells, August 1942
358:class also known as the
1952:25-pounder Gun-Howitzer
1759:Foreign-sourced weapons
1266:The Gunnery Pocket Book
1128:Routledge 1994, page 92
1091:Tribal Class Destroyers
1020:Battleship, Middlebrook
934:The Gunnery Pocket Book
913:Routledge 1994, page 87
733:Princess Anne's Battery
720:Princess Anne's Battery
352:QF 4.5-inch Mk III guns
315:Washington Naval Treaty
269:QF 5.25-inch Mark I gun
209:5.25-inch (133 mm)
2110:QF 2-pounder naval gun
1990:BL 5.5-inch medium gun
1900:QF 95 mm howitzer
1706:Anti-submarine weapons
1649:.303 Lewis machine gun
1418:Secondary armament and
728:
598:
586:
539:
448:Italian 135/45 mm
426:
411:
302:
229:7-8 rpm sustained fire
225:Rate of fire
2083:Anti-aircraft weapons
2041:75mm Pack howitzer M1
1745:Vickers K machine gun
1580:Anti-aircraft weapons
1337:naval weapons of the
1274:. Brassey's: London.
1045:Williams, Anthony G.
785:QF 4.5-inch naval gun
716:
592:
584:
533:
452:Capitani Romani-class
422:
406:
294:
2105:QF 1½-pounder Mk III
2020:BL 9.2-inch howitzer
2010:BL 7.2-inch howitzer
2000:BL 6-inch gun Mk XIX
1962:QF 4.5-inch howitzer
1844:British Commonwealth
1733:Small craft armament
1714:depth charge thrower
1659:QF 3-pounder Vickers
1588:Unrotated projectile
1335:British Commonwealth
1009:Models 1937 and 1938
749:) is at the gate of
597:, Papua, August 1944
513:10.5 cm SK C/33
235:Muzzle velocity
46:5.25-inch turret on
34:QF 5.25-inch Mark I
2161:QF 4.7-inch Mk I–IV
2151:QF 6-pounder 10 cwt
1802:Mark 8 torpedo (US)
1633:QF 4.7-inch Mk VIII
1496:QF 6-pounder 10 cwt
1034:Dido Class Cruisers
937:. 1945. p. 51.
450:gun as used on the
2135:QF 5.25-inch Mk II
2074:ML 4.2-inch mortar
2064:SBML 2-inch mortar
2025:240 mm howitzer M1
2015:BL 8-inch howitzer
1995:BL 6-inch howitzer
1973:guns and howitzers
1885:QF 3-inch howitzer
1460:BL 6-inch Mk XXIII
1288:W. Kimber: London.
1259:Ireland, Bernard,
1181:Naval Weapons page
888:Page of Navweapons
767:List of naval guns
729:
709:Surviving examples
599:
587:
555:-class battleships
540:
303:
128:Production history
2263:Coastal artillery
2230:
2229:
2200:Railway artillery
2186:BL 14-inch Mk VII
2176:BL 8-inch Mk VIII
2171:BL 7.5-inch Mk VI
2130:QF 4.5-inch Mk II
1985:BL 60-pounder gun
1971:Medium and heavy
1810:
1809:
1541:QF 4.7-inch Mk XI
1531:BL 4.7-inch Mk II
1455:BL 6-inch Mk XXII
1409:BL 8-inch Mk VIII
1404:BL 7.5-inch Mk VI
1207:DiGiulian, Tony,
1161:978-0-9775990-8-0
791:5"/38 caliber gun
466:Operation Halberd
271:was the heaviest
265:
264:
219:-5 to +70 degrees
91:1942-1960s (land)
89:1940-1985 (naval)
16:(Redirected from
2275:
2258:133 mm artillery
2181:BL 9.2-inch Mk X
2069:ML 3-inch mortar
1957:25-pounder Short
1837:
1830:
1823:
1814:
1813:
1740:Molins 6-pounder
1623:QF 4-inch Mk XVI
1613:QF 3-inch 20 cwt
1593:Holman Projector
1565:QF 3-inch 20 cwt
1521:QF 4-inch Mk XIX
1516:QF 4-inch Mk XVI
1450:BL 6-inch Mk XII
1339:Second World War
1328:
1321:
1314:
1305:
1304:
1217:London: Jane's.
1201:Campbell, John,
1184:
1178:
1172:
1169:
1163:
1153:
1147:
1144:
1138:
1137:Hogg pg. 105-106
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691:
673:
509:
350:, which mounted
281:Second World War
273:dual-purpose gun
67:Dual-purpose gun
44:
35:
30:
29:
27:Dual-purpose gun
21:
18:QF 5.25 inch gun
2283:
2282:
2278:
2277:
2276:
2274:
2273:
2272:
2233:
2232:
2231:
2226:
2195:
2191:BL 15-inch Mk I
2139:
2078:
2050:
2029:
2005:155 mm Long Tom
1972:
1966:
1942:75 mm Gun M1917
1930:
1904:
1853:
1841:
1811:
1806:
1754:
1750:18-inch torpedo
1728:
1701:
1682:21-inch Mk VIII
1663:
1637:
1574:
1545:
1511:BL 4-inch Mk IX
1506:QF 4-inch Mk IV
1481:
1464:
1419:
1413:
1389:
1360:
1341:
1332:
1295:
1245:Horner, David,
1192:
1187:
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1170:
1166:
1154:
1150:
1145:
1141:
1136:
1132:
1127:
1123:
1117:
1113:
1105:
1101:
1088:
1084:
1079:
1075:
1070:. navweaps.com.
1066:
1065:
1058:
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873:
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779:12.8 cm FlaK 40
775:
763:
727:
711:
704:
703:
692:
683:
682:
674:
665:
619:
579:
563:-class cruisers
545:
507:
470:Prince of Wales
461:Prince of Wales
436:as used on the
402:
289:
260:
250:
240:
195:
184:
120:
106:
104:Royal Artillery
102:
90:
86:In service
81:Service history
58:
33:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
2281:
2271:
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2095:20 mm Oerlikon
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1909:Anti-tank guns
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1859:
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1677:21-inch Mk VII
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1598:20 mm Oerlikon
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922:Campbell, p.46
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2144:Coast defence
2142:
2136:
2133:
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2128:
2126:
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2118:
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2108:
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2100:20 mm Polsten
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1947:QF 18-pounder
1945:
1943:
1940:
1939:
1937:
1933:
1927:
1926:QF 17-pounder
1924:
1922:
1919:
1917:
1914:
1913:
1911:
1907:
1901:
1898:
1896:
1893:
1891:
1890:QF 17-pounder
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1692:21-inch Mk XI
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1642:Light weapons
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1423:main armament
1422:
1421:light cruiser
1416:
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1397:main armament
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1395:Heavy cruiser
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1255:1-86373-917-3
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390:anti-aircraft
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19:
2115:Bofors 40 mm
1921:QF 6-pounder
1916:QF 2-pounder
1875:QF 6-pounder
1870:QF 3-pounder
1865:QF 2-pounder
1851:World War II
1771:40 mm Bofors
1712:Thornycroft
1687:21-inch Mk X
1608:40 mm Bofors
1440:QF 5.25-inch
1439:
1366:Capital ship
1285:
1271:
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1196:
1190:Bibliography
1176:
1167:
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1109:navweaps.com
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611:World War II
608:
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595:Port Moresby
577:Land service
569:
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543:Ship classes
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331:
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308:
304:
298:
275:used by the
268:
266:
194:133x782 mm R
173: length
118:World War II
96:Used by
49:
2125:QF 3.7-inch
1628:QF 4.5-inch
1526:QF 4.5-inch
1470:Minesweeper
1445:BL 5.5-inch
1435:QF 4.5-inch
1229:Hogg, Ian V
1195:Brown, D.K.
474:along with
279:during the
197:Separate QF
144:Mk I, Mk II
57:, June 1944
2237:Categories
1385:BL 16-inch
1380:BL 15-inch
1375:BL 14-inch
1356:BL 15-inch
1011:Navweapons
999:Navweapons
810:References
663:Ammunition
444:destroyers
277:Royal Navy
122:Korean War
100:Royal Navy
2120:QF 3-inch
2090:Z Battery
1858:Tank guns
1847:artillery
1669:Torpedoes
1551:Submarine
1487:Destroyer
950:HMS
871:Citations
744:HMS
724:Gibraltar
697:HMS
568:HMS
538:in 1943.
500:Luftwaffe
485:HMS
459:HMS
415:HMS
375:HMS
368:HMS
347:Charybdis
345:HMS
338:HMS
297:HMS
215:Elevation
1895:77 mm HV
1880:QF 75 mm
1719:Hedgehog
1489:armament
1478:Corvette
1231:. 1998.
1089:Hodges,
952:Euryalus
830:Royalist
761:See also
699:Euryalus
695:Crew of
643:Vanguard
627:calibres
609:Late in
570:Vanguard
518:Bismarck
505:Euryalus
503:reduced
432:Mle 1934
417:Euryalus
377:Vanguard
320:VT-fuzed
178:calibres
141:Variants
133:Designed
2056:Mortars
1483:Frigate
1347:Monitor
1032:Raven,
984:Navweap
968:, p 63.
964:Sired,
755:Karachi
524:Tirpitz
492:Bellona
487:Spartan
476:Repulse
464:during
439:Mogador
364:Bellona
360:Bellona
205:Calibre
1278:
1253:
1239:
1221:
1159:
828:HMNZS
746:Diadem
677:Mk II
441:-class
340:Scylla
334:-class
311:-class
287:Design
171:Barrel
162:Length
50:Sirius
1796:Y-gun
1724:Squid
1474:Sloop
837:Babur
815:Notes
740:Babur
649:range
508:'
396:gun.
370:Anson
190:Shell
1553:guns
1485:and
1349:guns
1276:ISBN
1251:ISBN
1237:ISBN
1219:ISBN
1157:ISBN
1095:HACS
835:PNS
742:(ex
561:Dido
521:and
496:Dido
490:, a
481:Dido
434:guns
392:and
386:Dido
384:and
356:Dido
343:and
332:Dido
267:The
154:Mass
136:1935
114:Wars
63:Type
48:HMS
1849:of
753:in
679:SAP
527:.
2239::
1476:,
1472:,
1059:^
1049:.
1025:^
982:.
906:^
894:^
878:^
722:,
1836:e
1829:t
1822:v
1480:,
1327:e
1320:t
1313:v
1225:.
1053:.
986:.
645:.
629:)
20:)
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