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30-pounder long gun
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 30-pounder long gun |
| image | 30-pounder long gun profile.svg |
| caption | 30-pounder without rigging. |
| origin | France |
| type | naval gun |
| is_artillery | yes |
| is_UK | yes |
| service | 19th century |
| used_by | French Navy |
| wars | Invasion of Algiers, Battle of the Tagus, Battle of Veracruz |
| manufacturer | Factories of Saint-Gervais, Nevers and Ruelle |
| unit_cost | 1517.5 Francs |
| weight | 3035 kg |
| length | 315.8 cm |
| part_length | 282.9 cm |
| caliber | 164.7 mm |
The 30-pounder long gun was a large piece of artillery mounted on French warships of the Age of Sail. They were the heaviest component of the unified system standardised on the 30-pounder calibre, replacing both the 36-pounder long guns in their usages, and even some 24-pounders.
Usage
Installed on the lower deck of the larger warships from the 1820s, the 30-pounder long gun was the largest caliber used in the late Navy of the Age of the Sail, used on the ships defined by the Commission de Paris. On three-deckers, the middle deck used 30-pounder short guns, and the upper deck used 30-pounder carronades. The flagship Bretagne was an exception to this rule, retaining the older 36-pounder long gun as to maximise the weight of her broadside.
History
In the wake of the Napoleonic Wars, the French Navy undertook a number of reforms, most notably a reform in the artillery system. In contrast with the 1788 system, where large warships armed their main batteries with large 36-pounder long guns and upper deck with smaller long guns using smaller shots, it was decided to standardise on the 30-pound calibre, and deploy a variety of guns of different weights, as not to overload the tops. The differences in weight were obtained by fielding a large 30-pounder long gun, a shorter 30-pounder with a thinner barrel, and a 30-pounder carronade.
This allowed a much simplified handling of ammunition, and significantly increased the broadsides of warships. A first-rank 60-gun frigate of the 1840s thus armed had a heavier broadside than a 74-gun ship of the line of the 1780s.
Sources and references
References
Bibliography
- {{cite book
References
- Aide-mémoire de l'artillerie navale, p. 14
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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