BL 9.2-inch Mk XI gun | |
---|---|
![]()
Agamemnon fires her 9.2-inch secondary guns at
Ottoman Turkish forts at
Sedd el Bahr on 4 March 1915 | |
Type | Naval gun |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
In service | 1908 – 1920 [1] |
Used by | United Kingdom |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Designer | Vickers |
Designed | 1902 [2] |
Specifications | |
Mass | 28 tons barrel & breech |
Barrel length | 38 ft 4 in (11.68 m) bore (50 cal) |
Shell | 380 pounds (172.4 kg) Lyddite, Armour-piercing, Shrapnel [3] |
Calibre | 9.2 inches (233.7 mm) |
Muzzle velocity | 2,875 ft/s (876 m/s) [4] |
The BL 9.2-inch Mark XI gun [note 1] was a British 50 calibre high-velocity naval gun which was mounted as primary armament on armoured cruisers and secondary armament on pre-dreadnought battleships.
The gun with its increased length of 50 calibres was an attempt to extract a higher velocity, and hence more range and armour-piercing capability, from the 9.2-inch gun. Like other British 50-calibre guns of the period, it was relatively unsuccessful and was the last model of 9.2-inch gun Britain built.
Guns were mounted in the following ships :
After the scrapping of these ships, these guns and mountings were retained in storage. There was the intention, at one point, early during World War Two, to use them as armament for small monitors which would have been reduced versions of the Roberts-class monitors; this however never advanced beyond the planning stage.
The National Archives of the United Kingdom, Kew. SUPP 6/61
BL 9.2-inch Mk XI gun | |
---|---|
![]()
Agamemnon fires her 9.2-inch secondary guns at
Ottoman Turkish forts at
Sedd el Bahr on 4 March 1915 | |
Type | Naval gun |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
In service | 1908 – 1920 [1] |
Used by | United Kingdom |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Designer | Vickers |
Designed | 1902 [2] |
Specifications | |
Mass | 28 tons barrel & breech |
Barrel length | 38 ft 4 in (11.68 m) bore (50 cal) |
Shell | 380 pounds (172.4 kg) Lyddite, Armour-piercing, Shrapnel [3] |
Calibre | 9.2 inches (233.7 mm) |
Muzzle velocity | 2,875 ft/s (876 m/s) [4] |
The BL 9.2-inch Mark XI gun [note 1] was a British 50 calibre high-velocity naval gun which was mounted as primary armament on armoured cruisers and secondary armament on pre-dreadnought battleships.
The gun with its increased length of 50 calibres was an attempt to extract a higher velocity, and hence more range and armour-piercing capability, from the 9.2-inch gun. Like other British 50-calibre guns of the period, it was relatively unsuccessful and was the last model of 9.2-inch gun Britain built.
Guns were mounted in the following ships :
After the scrapping of these ships, these guns and mountings were retained in storage. There was the intention, at one point, early during World War Two, to use them as armament for small monitors which would have been reduced versions of the Roberts-class monitors; this however never advanced beyond the planning stage.
The National Archives of the United Kingdom, Kew. SUPP 6/61