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You might need to weld/bolt it to the deck, heavy seas etc.
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Non illigitimi carborundum.
They fired the damn thing quite a lot on my commission (74-76), I even recall, I hope correctly, that the gunner managed to straddle a fishing boat when shooting at an island target !
I wasn't saying that the gun would be the same as is proposed, only that it seems that the calibre might be reintroduced.
I wonder if they'll be considering larger calibres later - I'll bet there will be some old-time gunnery rates reminiscing then ....
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'Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive' - Bugs Bunny
Only problem is last time I looked the abbot only has a 105mm gun even smaller than the 4,5. I think you meant the AS90
_________________
Peter
Only problem is last time I looked the abbot only has a 105mm gun even smaller than the 4,5. I think you meant the AS90
Probably, but it has been a long time since I was involved in goonery. The programme I was thinking about was something like "Naval Gun 2000". But besause the powers to be couldn't get their sh1t together, they settled for extended range ammunition instead.
Semper Strenuissima
Gossip, rumour & scandal .....
'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 4:06 pm
www.modoracle.com/news...60CF25E3D7
What goes around, comes around. Don't hold your breath. I seem to recall twenty years of chat about this sort of thing.
(Lord Fisher: 'What we want is Gunnery, Gunnery and more Gunnery!')
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."
What goes around, comes around. Don't hold your breath. I seem to recall twenty years of chat about this sort of thing.
(Lord Fisher: 'What we want is Gunnery, Gunnery and more Gunnery!')
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."

Seaweed
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Jan 18, 2007
- Location: Near Pompey
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 4:56 pm
Interesting.
I was one of the dusties involved in reducing the amount of 6" gun spares held in stores when I served in Tiger.
IIRC it was costed then, at over 100k's worth of spares being returned to Pompey yard.
I believe the Gunnery bodies at the time were sure that such a large calibre gun would never be needed again - looks like they may have been a little off target (pun intended
)
I do recall that they were rather deafening - as our mess was not too far under the turret, and just aft the cable pipes ....
_________________
'Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive' - Bugs Bunny
Last edited by whitemouse on Tue Mar 04, 2008 8:56 am; edited 1 time in total
I was one of the dusties involved in reducing the amount of 6" gun spares held in stores when I served in Tiger.
IIRC it was costed then, at over 100k's worth of spares being returned to Pompey yard.
I believe the Gunnery bodies at the time were sure that such a large calibre gun would never be needed again - looks like they may have been a little off target (pun intended
I do recall that they were rather deafening - as our mess was not too far under the turret, and just aft the cable pipes ....
_________________
'Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive' - Bugs Bunny
Last edited by whitemouse on Tue Mar 04, 2008 8:56 am; edited 1 time in total

whitemouse
- Posts: 2435
- Joined: Apr 11, 2006
- Location: London - previously Kent
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 7:06 pm
So we`ll be down to three type 45`s as the money will have run out after BAE have had an extra cut for R and D of this "new "gun.

Topstop
- Posts: 1233
- Joined: Jun 22, 2007
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Mon Mar 03, 2008 10:44 pm
Why all this procrastinating, just park an Abbot Self Propelled Gun on the Focsle.
Semper Strenuissima
Semper Strenuissima

onions
- Posts: 542
- Joined: Nov 27, 2006
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 9:07 am
onions:
Why all this procrastinating, just park an Abbot Self Propelled Gun on the Focsle.
Semper Strenuissima
Semper Strenuissima
You might need to weld/bolt it to the deck, heavy seas etc.
_________________
Non illigitimi carborundum.

Crabman
- Posts: 860
- Joined: May 23, 2007
- Location: Uncertain of position.
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 11:17 am
Whitemouse, this isn'the same gun, so all those spares - which may still be salted away somewhere - have had their day. But I'm glad to read that it actually got fired, in the 1st commission there was quite a problem getting it to do that with any regularity.
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."

Seaweed
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Jan 18, 2007
- Location: Near Pompey
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 11:56 am
Seaweed:
Whitemouse, this isn'the same gun, so all those spares - which may still be salted away somewhere - have had their day. But I'm glad to read that it actually got fired, in the 1st commission there was quite a problem getting it to do that with any regularity.
They fired the damn thing quite a lot on my commission (74-76), I even recall, I hope correctly, that the gunner managed to straddle a fishing boat when shooting at an island target !
I wasn't saying that the gun would be the same as is proposed, only that it seems that the calibre might be reintroduced.
I wonder if they'll be considering larger calibres later - I'll bet there will be some old-time gunnery rates reminiscing then ....
_________________
'Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive' - Bugs Bunny

whitemouse
- Posts: 2435
- Joined: Apr 11, 2006
- Location: London - previously Kent
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 12:25 pm
onions:
Why all this procrastinating, just park an Abbot Self Propelled Gun on the Focsle.
Semper Strenuissima
Semper Strenuissima
Only problem is last time I looked the abbot only has a 105mm gun even smaller than the 4,5. I think you meant the AS90
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Peter

Maxi_77
- Posts: 6705
- Joined: Feb 13, 2006
- Location: The Kingdom of Fife
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Tue Mar 04, 2008 3:02 pm
Maxi_77:
onions:
Why all this procrastinating, just park an Abbot Self Propelled Gun on the Focsle.
Semper Strenuissima
Semper Strenuissima
Only problem is last time I looked the abbot only has a 105mm gun even smaller than the 4,5. I think you meant the AS90
Probably, but it has been a long time since I was involved in goonery. The programme I was thinking about was something like "Naval Gun 2000". But besause the powers to be couldn't get their sh1t together, they settled for extended range ammunition instead.
Semper Strenuissima

onions
- Posts: 542
- Joined: Nov 27, 2006
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 3:11 pm
Basically the 6" gun will be the barrel from the AS90 - meaning comonality of ammo, and use existing ammo in NATO Stocks...
what they are doing is investigating a proposal from BAE Systems to "up gun" the 4.5" to accept the 155mm gun barrel and breach from the AS-90 self propelled gun.
Now this makes more sense to me as its not really a total new gun from scratch. It also allows us to use the armys shells and help joint development of shells etc.
Comparison:
4.5" naval gun
Range: 22km
Rate of Fire: 20-26 rounds per minute
Weight of shell (HE): 36.5kg (bursting charge 3kg)
155mm gun:
Range: ~25km (up to 70km with rocket assisted shell)
Rate of fire: ~12 rounds per minute
Weight of shell: 44.5kg
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what they are doing is investigating a proposal from BAE Systems to "up gun" the 4.5" to accept the 155mm gun barrel and breach from the AS-90 self propelled gun.
Now this makes more sense to me as its not really a total new gun from scratch. It also allows us to use the armys shells and help joint development of shells etc.
Comparison:
4.5" naval gun
Range: 22km
Rate of Fire: 20-26 rounds per minute
Weight of shell (HE): 36.5kg (bursting charge 3kg)
155mm gun:
Range: ~25km (up to 70km with rocket assisted shell)
Rate of fire: ~12 rounds per minute
Weight of shell: 44.5kg
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Rincewind
- Posts: 231
- Joined: Feb 05, 2006
- Location: HMS Belfast
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 3:57 pm
As a 4.5" Maintainer, I applaud the proposed introduction into service of a 6" Gun, as extending the range of our NGS capability seems in theory to be a good idea. When it is suggested, however, that 6" ordnance be fitted to the existing mounting, alarm bells ring.
The existing below-decks and on-mounting feed system (for both Mod 0 and Mod 1 Mountings) will need to be replaced in its entirety, due to the larger/heavier nature of the 155mm round. The recoil system will also have to be replaced to enable the mounting to deal with the increase in recoil forces with the larger round. All ammunition stowages, plus the endless chain hoist used for moving rounds between decks, will need to be replaced to accommodate the 6" ammunition. Furthermore, the associated fire control system would inevitably have to be replaced to allow the capability of the new ammunition to be realised.
In short, my gut feeling is that the potential cost savings which might be envisaged by retaining some aspects of the existing mountings and using the same ordnance and ammunition as the AS-90 would be greatly exceeded by the re-design and re-engineering costs, and the unavoidable huge complications associated with trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
Lets do the job properly; put the money up front to design and manufacture a purpose built 6" Naval Gun…. or even buy and fit the US 155 mm Advanced Gun System currently under development by BAE Systems Armaments Systems!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...Gun_System
_________________
Gun and Hoist Empty, Single Loading Available...
The existing below-decks and on-mounting feed system (for both Mod 0 and Mod 1 Mountings) will need to be replaced in its entirety, due to the larger/heavier nature of the 155mm round. The recoil system will also have to be replaced to enable the mounting to deal with the increase in recoil forces with the larger round. All ammunition stowages, plus the endless chain hoist used for moving rounds between decks, will need to be replaced to accommodate the 6" ammunition. Furthermore, the associated fire control system would inevitably have to be replaced to allow the capability of the new ammunition to be realised.
In short, my gut feeling is that the potential cost savings which might be envisaged by retaining some aspects of the existing mountings and using the same ordnance and ammunition as the AS-90 would be greatly exceeded by the re-design and re-engineering costs, and the unavoidable huge complications associated with trying to fit a square peg in a round hole.
Lets do the job properly; put the money up front to design and manufacture a purpose built 6" Naval Gun…. or even buy and fit the US 155 mm Advanced Gun System currently under development by BAE Systems Armaments Systems!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...Gun_System
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Gun and Hoist Empty, Single Loading Available...

backafty
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Apr 20, 2007
- Location: Devonport
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 4:09 pm
Worse than that mate. The pongo 155 ammo uses separate bagged charges (not certified for naval mags btw). Not just the size of the feed ring and loader that's going to need changing - back to separate shell rooms and magazines....
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Not_a_boffin
- Posts: 635
- Joined: Feb 10, 2006
- Location: Pompey
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 4:54 pm
Re-enter Seaweed, who has actually served with 6" using bagged charges (6" Mk 23). This gun required a crew of fifty for a triple turret so I would expect at least 18 bodies to serve one gun on its own. Highest safe rate of fire was six rounds per minute. Weight of shell of the order of one hundredweight. It will be interesting to read how handling of soft charges can be safely automated as the existing mounting has no people init at all as I understand things. Also, one wonders what the detonation system is/will be.
back-afty is spot on; basically if you have a much bigger bang you need a much stronger mounting and deck.
With regard to the hype about CEP on Wikipedia, The longer the range the higher the round must go and the greater the errors due to wind. (Rhetorical question) will we have a special wind-finding round or assume that wind info will be freely available to us in wartime halfway across the globe?
Somewhat confusing hints of answers to some of this at
www.army-technology.co...cts/as90/.
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."
back-afty is spot on; basically if you have a much bigger bang you need a much stronger mounting and deck.
With regard to the hype about CEP on Wikipedia, The longer the range the higher the round must go and the greater the errors due to wind. (Rhetorical question) will we have a special wind-finding round or assume that wind info will be freely available to us in wartime halfway across the globe?
Somewhat confusing hints of answers to some of this at
www.army-technology.co...cts/as90/.
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."

Seaweed
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Jan 18, 2007
- Location: Near Pompey
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 6:08 pm
I think in reality this isn't going to happen. The 4.5in gun isn't just used for NGS, and has been highlighted, the 155mm uses high elevations in order to achieve range.
Secondly anecdotal evidence suggests that this idea originated from some SO1 who was blue skying with a 1/2 star without actually thinking things through. Vickers have indeed mounted a 155 barrel in a Mk8 turret, but to my knowledge it hasn't been fired either on a test bed or a sea going platform. Add to this the fact that the 4.5 magazine on T45 is incredibly cramped, i think we would need to be recruiting small children and feeding them steroids in order to effectively hump the shells and powder bags around.
The simpler solution would have been to mount a 5in gun as the Spanish and dutch have already done which utilises an already standard NATO naval round.
Yet again, another wasted opportunity
Secondly anecdotal evidence suggests that this idea originated from some SO1 who was blue skying with a 1/2 star without actually thinking things through. Vickers have indeed mounted a 155 barrel in a Mk8 turret, but to my knowledge it hasn't been fired either on a test bed or a sea going platform. Add to this the fact that the 4.5 magazine on T45 is incredibly cramped, i think we would need to be recruiting small children and feeding them steroids in order to effectively hump the shells and powder bags around.
The simpler solution would have been to mount a 5in gun as the Spanish and dutch have already done which utilises an already standard NATO naval round.
Yet again, another wasted opportunity

flippineck
- Posts: 99
- Joined: Jul 19, 2007
Re: 'New' 6-inch gun
Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2008 7:02 pm
1. It would seem that the primary object of this exercise is NGS and therefore it makes sense to use a round that Percy Pongo considers best for shredding Terry Taliban and whomever. With it comes the gun that uses it but that's just the barrel and presumably the breech etc. Such an ensemble would be adequate in surface fire against an enemy obliging enough to come in close enough and not stand off and pot at one with a guided missile. Medium range guns are completely useless in AA as the gun direction time cycle is too long to get the round to the target before weapon release (or at all) and this has been the case for decades, in spite of millions spent pretending otherwise. I don't think the RN or anyone else has shot down an aircraft with a medium range gun since 1945 when the aircraft were obligingly slower. Hence of course the investment in Close Range solutions, Phalanx etc.
2. One problem for the RN is that (as far as I can see) no longer has anyone with other than a superficial knowledge of gunnery; the last specialists in this extremely complicated subject qualified in 1972, after the then obligatory twelve-month course, and so even if we wanted to resurrect the subject there cannot be anybody nowadays who knows enough to even get the syllabus started. So NO chance of development being user-led. It must not be left to the manufacturers whose only aim is to con the MoD into handing over lots of money (the loyalty of a company is entirely to its shareholders). Vickers have serially suckered the Andrew with duff armaments since (for instance) the 14" quad in PoW which packed up when she was trying to poke the Bismarck and the 6" Mk26 which, after years aboard Cumberland as trials ship, still didn't work when it went to sea for real, partly because Vickers for all their years of experience couldn't make shock-proof hydraulics.
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."
2. One problem for the RN is that (as far as I can see) no longer has anyone with other than a superficial knowledge of gunnery; the last specialists in this extremely complicated subject qualified in 1972, after the then obligatory twelve-month course, and so even if we wanted to resurrect the subject there cannot be anybody nowadays who knows enough to even get the syllabus started. So NO chance of development being user-led. It must not be left to the manufacturers whose only aim is to con the MoD into handing over lots of money (the loyalty of a company is entirely to its shareholders). Vickers have serially suckered the Andrew with duff armaments since (for instance) the 14" quad in PoW which packed up when she was trying to poke the Bismarck and the 6" Mk26 which, after years aboard Cumberland as trials ship, still didn't work when it went to sea for real, partly because Vickers for all their years of experience couldn't make shock-proof hydraulics.
_________________
Edmund Burke: 'Wars may be deferred .. but they cannot be wholly avoided .. to purchase present quiet, at the price of future security, is .. a cowardice of the most base and degrading nature."

Seaweed
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Jan 18, 2007
- Location: Near Pompey
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