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Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93

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Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93
Canon de 19 sur affut de cote.
TypeCoastal artillery
Place of originFrance
Service history
In service1893-1945
Used by France
 Nazi Germany
 Italy
WarsWorld War I
World War II
Production history
VariantsRailway gun
Specifications
MassComplete: 26 t (26 long tons; 29 short tons)
Carriage: 16 t (16 long tons; 18 short tons)
Barrel: 10 t (9.8 long tons; 11 short tons)
Barrel length5.8 m (19 ft) L/30

ShellSeparate-loading, bagged charge and projectiles
Shell weight85 kg (187 lb)
Caliber194 mm (7.6 in)
Breechde Bange
RecoilHydro-gravity
CarriageCenter pivot
Elevation-6° to +30°
Traverse360°
Rate of fire1 round every two minutes
Muzzle velocity640 m/s (2,100 ft/s)
Maximum firing range18.3 km (11.4 mi)

The Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93 was a French coastal defense gun designed and built before World War I that also saw action during World War II. A number of guns were also converted to railway guns during World War I in order to meet the need for heavy artillery and these were also used in World War II.

Design

The Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93 were typical built-up guns of the period with mixed construction consisting of a rifled steel liner and several layers of iron reinforcing hoops. In French service guns of mixed steel/iron construction were designated in centimeters while all steel guns were designated in millimeters. However, reference materials don't always distinguish the difference in construction and use either unit of measurement. The guns used a de Bange breech and fired separate loading bagged charges and projectiles.[1]

The mle 1870/93 was mounted on a mle 1886 center pivot mount with a rectangular steel firing platform which sat on top of a large diameter geared steel ring set into a concrete slab behind a parapet with the barrel of the gun overhanging the parapet at the front and an overhanging loading platform to the rear. The mounts allowed high angles of elevation +30° with 360° of traverse. The mount was traversed by a worm gear which attached to the base.[2]

The recoil system for the mle 1870/93 consisted of a U shaped gun cradle which held the trunnioned barrel and a slightly inclined firing platform with a hydro-gravity recoil system. When the gun fired the hydraulic buffer slowed the recoil of the cradle which slid up a set of inclined rails on the firing platform and then returned to position by the combined action of the buffers and gravity.[2]

Railway guns

World War I

Twenty-six mle 1893-1896 guns were converted to Canon de 19 modèle 1870/93 TAZ railway guns during the first world war. The guns were mounted in a large turret on an armored railroad carriage built by Schneider.[1]

World War II

Twenty-four mle 1870/93 TAZ railway guns were mobilized at the beginning of the second world war. After the fall of France, nine guns were used by the Germans as coastal defense artillery under the designation 19 cm K(E) 486(f).[3] The Kingdom of Italy also received twelve guns after the Armistice of Villa Incisa and these were given the designation Cannone da 194/29 Modello 70/93.[4] They were integrated into armored trains of the Royal Italian Army and assigned coastal defense duties. Their only action was 13 March 1944 with the Italian Co-belligerent Army during the Battle of Montelungo.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b Romanych, Mark (24 August 2017). Railway Guns of World War I. Heuer, Greg, Noon, Steve. London. pp. 5–15. ISBN 9781472816412. OCLC 999616340.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b "Canons de 19 de côte modèles 1870 - FortiffSéré". www.fortiffsere.fr. Retrieved 2018-09-08.
  3. ^ Zaloga, Steve (16 February 2016). Railway guns of World War II. Dennis, Peter. Oxford. p. 5. ISBN 978-1472810687. OCLC 907965829.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ "Le artiglierie italiane nella 2ª Guerra Mondiale". xoomer.virgilio.it. Retrieved 2018-09-08.
  5. ^ Pietrangeli, Mario (2012). "The militarized railways, armed trains, and hospital trains in the first and second world war 1915-1945" (PDF). Retrieved 8 September 2018.