Testing of single and twin mounted 3“/50 caliber Mark 22 semi-automatic anti-aircraft guns in 1951
In 1944-1945, the USN found that their 20 mm Oerlikons and 40 mm Bofors batteries were ineffective in stopping Japanese Kamikaze attacks. Only the 5“/38 (12.7 cm) fired a round large enough to kill-stop a determined attacker and this weapon was too heavy to use in the numbers necessary. This problem led to an accelerated program to develop an intermediate-caliber weapon that could fire a VT fuzed shell.
The weapon chosen was the standard 3“/50 ( cm) Mark 22 which was used on many Destroyer Escorts and auxiliaries built during the latter part of World War II. This was the smallest-caliber weapon which could still use the VT fuzes available at the time. It also had a concentric counter-recoil spring, which meant that it was more easily adapted for automatic fire. Automatic fire was achieved with an electrically driven auto-loader using revolving sprockets. BuOrd rushed this through the design phase, with the first prototype being ready for test firing on 1 September 1945. The end of the war
1 view
0
0
1 week ago 00:29:28 1
🎥 Can you guess the Anime by the First 10 Seconds? 🔥 Anime Quiz
2 weeks ago 00:31:06 1
Whistleblow Uncovers Covid Scam
2 weeks ago 00:03:02 1
SPX Options Trading : Strategies for Big Gains!
3 weeks ago 00:16:36 1
PS5 Pro | LEGO Horizon Adventures | Performance / Gameplay
3 weeks ago 00:06:09 1
Audi Adblue Issues - P20BD Reductant Heater Circuit - Engine light on Audi Q5 TDI
3 weeks ago 01:10:29 1
Поиграли в 8 пропущенных игр [РефАААнд?!]
4 weeks ago 00:17:21 1
Russian Video, the first orbital flight of Buran
4 weeks ago 00:02:02 12
DayZ Update Teaser
4 weeks ago 00:08:02 1
ЗАСМЕЯЛСЯ ПОДПИСАЛСЯ | Тест на Психику Челендж | ЛУЧШИЕ ПРИКОЛЫ 2024 года | УГАР #105
1 month ago 00:39:19 1
Historian Answers Witchcraft Questions | Tech Support | WIRED