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38 cm SK C/34 naval gun

1930s German naval gun


1930s German naval gun

FieldValue
name38 cm SK C/34 naval gun
imageBundesarchiv Bild 101I-113-0010-17, Nordeuropa, Küstenbatterie.jpg
image_size300
caption38 cm turret of Batterie Vara, Kristiansand, Norway
originGermany
typeNaval gun, Railroad gun and Coastal defense
is_explosiveyes
is_artilleryyes
is_UK
service1940–45
used_byNazi Germany
warsWorld War II
<!-- Production history -->designerKrupp
design_date1936–39
manufacturerKrupp
variants
weight111 t
length19.63 m
part_length18.405 m L/52
crew
cartridgeseparate-loading, cased charge AP 800 kg
caliber380 mm
rate2.5 rounds per minute
velocity820 m/s
max_range35.5 km with 800 kg shell at 30° elev.
sights
breechhorizontal sliding-block
recoilHydro-pneumatic
elevation-5.5° to +30°
traverseup to 360°

(51.66 calibers) The 38 cm SK C/34SK – Schiffskanone (ship's gun) - Post 1920; C – Construktionsjahr (year of design) naval gun was developed by Germany in the late 1930s. It armed the s and was planned as the armament of the s and the re-armed s. Six twin-gun mountings were also sold to the Soviet Union and it was planned to use them on the s, however, they were never delivered. Spare guns were used as coastal artillery in Denmark, Norway and France. One gun and one barrel is currently on display at respectively Møvig Fortress outside Kristiansand and Bunkermuseum Hanstholm, Denmark.

Ammunition

It used the standard German naval system of ammunition where the base charge was held in a metallic cartridge case and supplemented by another charge in a silk bag. Both cartridges were rammed together.

;Propellant charge Main charge: 38 cm HuelsKart34 – GefLdG – 108 kg RP C/38 (16/7)

Fore charge: 38 cm VorKart34 – GefLdG – 104 kg RP C/38 (16/7)

Shell

Four types of shells were used by the 38 cm SK C/34, although the Siegfried-Granate could only be used by the coastal defense versions. Almost 40 percent lighter, this shell could be fired with a reduced charge at 920 m/s out to 40 km. With a full charge it reached 1050 m/s and could travel 55.7 km – over 34 miles.

Shell name
typeWeightFilling weightMuzzle velocityRange
*38 cm Spreng grenate. L/4.6 m Kz (m.Hb)*
nose-fused HE shell with ballistic cap800 kgapproximately 62.8kg TNT820 m/s35.6 km at 30°
*38 cm Spgr L4.5 Bdz (m.Hb)*
base-fused HE shell with ballistic cap800 kgapproximately 35kg TNT{{convert820m/sft/sabbr=on}}
*Psgr L/4.4 Bdz (m.Hb)*
base-fused AP shell with a ballistic cap800 kgapproximately 20.3kg TNT{{convert820m/sft/sabbr=on}}
nose- and base-fused HE shell with ballistic cap (Si.Gr L/4.5 Bdz u. Kz (m.Hb)) (light charge)495 kg69 kg TNT{{convert920m/sft/sabbr=on}}
nose- and base-fused HE shell with ballistic cap (Si.Gr L/4.5 Bdz u. Kz (m.Hb)) (full charge)495 kg69 kg TNT{{convert1050m/sft/sabbr=on}}

Coast defense gun

Model of the ''38 cm SK C/34'' emplacement at Hanstholm

These guns were modified with a larger chamber for coast defense duties to handle the increased amount of propellant used for the special long-range Siegfried shells. Gander and Chamberlain quote a weight of 105.3 t for these guns, presumably accounting for the extra volume of the enlarged chamber. An armored single mount, the Bettungsschiessgerüst ("Firing platform") C/39 was used by these guns. It had a maximum elevation of 60° and could traverse up to 360°, depending on the emplacement. The C/39 mount had two compartments; the upper housed the guns and their loading equipment, while the lower contained the ammunition hoists, their motors, and the elevation and traverse motors. The mount was fully powered and had an underground magazine. Normally these were placed in open concrete barbettes, relying on their armor, but Hitler thought that there was not enough protection for the guns of Battery Todt emplaced on Cap-Gris-Nez in the Pas de Calais near Wimereux and ordered a concrete casemate 3.5 m thick built over and around the mounts. This had the effect of limiting their traverse to 120°. Other C/39 mounts were installed at the Hanstholm fortress in Denmark, and the Vara fortress in Kristiansand, Norway.

Four Drh LC/34 turrets, three of which were originally intended to re-arm the Gneisenau and one completed to the Soviet order, modified for land service, were planned to be emplaced at Paimpol, Brittany and on the Cap de la Hague on the Cotentin Peninsula, but construction never actually began. Construction for two of those turrets was well underway at Blaavand-Oksby, Denmark when the war ended.{{cite web | access-date = 27 April 2009| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20090417123518/http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_15-52_skc34.htm| archive-date= 17 April 2009 | url-status= live}}{{cite book

Railroad gun

Main article: 38 cm Siegfried K (E)

Some guns also saw service as 38 cm Siegfried K (E) railroad guns, one of these being captured by American forces during the Rhône Valley campaign in 1944.

History

The first time these guns were used in combat was when the German battleship sailed out to hunt convoys alongside the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen in May 1941. Enroute was countered by the British heavy cruisers Norfolk and Suffolk, where the 38-cm guns were fired in anger for the first time in the war, warding off the two heavy cruisers (although the blast from them disabled the ship's own radar). Soon afterwards, the British battleships and engaged Bismarck, and her guns were fired in anger again, sinking Hood with a single hit. With Hood sunk, Bismarck turned her attention to Prince of Wales, hitting her three times and, alongside Prinz Eugen, sent her running off. They would be fired again when Bismarck was attacked by Fairey Swordfish torpedo bombers, where they were fired into the water to create massive splashes in order to blow away the British bombers. After Bismarck sustained a rudder jam, she was attacked by the British battleships King George V and Rodney. They would be fired but would claim no hits as they were all destroyed by 14-inch (356 mm) and 16-inch (406 mm) gunfire.

A few years later, on September 7, 1943, the German battleship Tirpitz used her 38-cm guns to bombard the island Spitzbergen. Fifty-two 38-cm shells were fired, and several shore installments were destroyed, and 74 soldiers were killed.

Weapons of comparable role, performance and era

Notes

Citations

References

Service manuals and publications

  • Krupp datasheet 38 cm S.K.C/34 WA52-444
  • Krupp datasheet 38 cm S.K.C/34 e WA52-453(e)
  • Bauvorschrift fuer den Schiffskoerper der Schlachtschiffe "F" und "G" ("Ersatz Hannover" und "Ersatz Schleswig-Holstein") O.K.M Archiv K I Nr. 20 Berlin, den 16.November 1936
  • M.Dv.Nr.185, Heft 2, Abmessungen, Gewichte, Raumbedarf der Munition und ihrer Packgefäße
  • Unterlagen und Richtlinien zur Bestimmung der Hauptkampfentfernung und der Geschoßwahl Heft a Textband
  • Unterlagen und Richtlinien zur Bestimmung der Hauptkampfentfernung und der Geschoßwahl Heft h Eigene Durchschlagsangaben für Schlachtschiffe Bismarck, Tirpitz und Beispiele (G.Kdos 100)
  • AVKS-700 Schlußbericht vom 31.05.1941, AVKS Erprobungen auf Schlachtschiff Bismarck

Literature

  • {{cite book |name-list-style=amp

References

  1. M.Dv.Nr.185 p. 6
  2. Bauvorschrift fuer den Schiffskoerper p. 64 SI 48
  3. Bauvorschrift fuer den Schiffskoerper p. 52 SI 33
  4. AVKS-700 Schlußbericht p. 19 Hauptaufzuege
  5. http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_15-52_skc34.htm Chamber volume increased from 19,467 in3 (319 dm3) to 22,072 in3 (361.7 dm3), rifling length reduced from 629.2 in. (15.982 m) to 620 in (15.748 m)
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