1-inch Nordenfelt gun

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1-inch Nordenfelt gun
Nordenfelt gun four barreled.JPG
Four-barrel version
Type Naval gun
Place of origin United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1880–1890s
Used by Many navies
Production history
Designer Helge Palmcrantz
Manufacturer Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Company
Specifications
Weight 447 pounds (203 kg)[1]
Barrel length 35.48 inches (901 mm)[1]

Shell 7.25 ounces (0.206 kg) solid steel bullet with brass jacket[1]
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Muzzle velocity 1,464 feet per second (446 m/s)[1]

The 1-inch Nordenfelt gun was an early rapid-firing light gun intended to defend larger warships against the new small fast-moving torpedo boats in the late 1870s to the early 1880s.

Description

The gun was an enlarged version of the successful rifle-calibre Nordenfelt hand-cranked "machine gun" designed by Helge Palmcrantz and was intended to combine its rapid rate of fire with a projectile capable of deterring attacking torpedo boats. The gun fired a solid steel bullet with hardened tip and brass jacket: under the terms of the St. Petersburg Declaration of 1868, exploding shells weighing less than 400 grams were not allowed to be used in warfare between the signatory nations.

Woodcut depicting Royal Navy gunners in action with four-barrel model. The gun captain, left, is operating the training handwheel

The gun was used in one, two and four-barrel versions. The ammunition was fed by gravity from a hopper above the breech subdivided into separate columns for each barrel. The gunner loaded and fired the multiple barrels by moving a lever on the right side of the gun forward and backwards. Pulling the lever backwards extracted the fired cartridges, pushing it forward then loaded fresh cartridges into all the barrels, and the final part of the forward motion fired all the barrels, one at a time in quick succession. Hence the gun functioned as a type of volley gun, firing bullets in bursts, compared to the contemporary Gatling gun and the true machine guns which succeeded it such as the Maxim gun, which fired at a steady continuous rate.

The gunner was occupied with manually operating the loading and firing lever, while the gun captain aimed the gun and operated the elevation and training handwheels.

It was superseded for anti-torpedo boat defence in the mid-1880s by the new generation of Hotchkiss and Nordenfelt "QF" guns of 47-mm and 57-mm calibre firing exploding "common pointed" shells weighing 3–6 pounds.

Ammunition

British Mk VI round (left) and blank round (right)

Surviving examples

A 4-barrelled gun at The Tower of London. London, England

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 British service Mk III 4-barrel version. Text Book of Gunnery, 1887. Table XVI

References

External links