RML 64-pounder 58 cwt
The RML 64-pounder 58 cwt guns (converted) were British rifled muzzle-loading guns converted from obsolete smoothbore 32-pounder 58 cwt guns.[note 1]
Ordnance RML 64 pounder 58 cwt gun (converted) | |
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64 Pounder (58 cwt) RML gun on iron depression carriage, c1872. One of several preserved in Gibraltar | |
Type | Coast defence gun |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Service history | |
In service | 1870–1902 |
Used by | British Army British Colonies |
Production history | |
Designer | Lt Col William Dundas |
Designed | 1847 |
Manufacturer | Royal Gun Factory |
Variants | One mark only |
Specifications | |
Mass | 6,496 pounds (2,947 kg) |
Barrel length | 103.27 inches (2.623 m) (bore)[1] |
Shell | 64 pounds (29.03 kg) |
Calibre | 6.3-inch (160.0 mm) |
Carriage | Garrison carriage |
Muzzle velocity | 1,230 feet per second (370 m/s)[2] |
Sights | Centre sighted |
Design
When Britain adopted rifled ordnance in the 1860s it still had large stocks of serviceable but now obsolete smoothbore guns. Gun barrels were expensive to manufacture, so the best and most recent models were selected for conversion to rifled guns, for use as second-line ordnance, using a technique designed by William Palliser. The Palliser conversion was based on what was accepted as a sound principle that the strongest material in the barrel construction should be innermost, and hence a new tube of stronger wrought iron was inserted in the old cast iron barrel, rather than attempting to reinforce the old barrel from the outside.[1]
This gun was based on the cast-iron barrel of the Dundas Pattern 32-pounder 58 cwt gun, which previously fired a 32-pound solid shot.[3] The gun was bored out to 10.5 inches and a new built-up wrought iron inner tube with inner diameter of 6.29 inches was inserted and fastened in place. The gun was then rifled with 3 grooves, with a uniform twist of 1 turn in 40 calibres (i.e. 1 turn in 252 inches), and proof fired. The proof firing also served to expand the new tube slightly and ensure a tight fit in the old iron tube.[1]
Deployment
This nature of gun did see Naval Service (NS) with the Naval Forces of the Colony of Victoria in Australia aboard the ex Ship-of-the-Line Nelson. To maintain maximum capability the gunners aboard the Nelson were drilled for both Smooth Bore and Rifled ammunition, and so the guns retained the original Millar Pattern sights as well as having one set of R.M.L. sights placed to the right of the centre line - otherwise the sighting arrangement normally used in British service was a single set of R.M.L. sights on the centre line. The mountings used on this vessel were Wood Naval Standing Carriages.
The gun mountings for coast defence in both British and colonial locations varied enormously. Carriages in both wood and iron varied in complexity – from a simple wooden garrison carriage, traversing carriages, right through to some guns mounted on Moncrieff Disappearing gun carriages.
They became obsolete for coast artillery use in 1902, whereupon most of them were scrapped and disposed of.
See also
- RML 64 pounder 64 cwt gun the equivalent new design frontline 64-pounder gun
Surviving examples
- Gun number 70, dated 1871 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 101, dated 1873 at Royal Armouries, Fort Nelson, Hampshire, UK
- Gun number 188, dated 1873 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 220, dated 1873 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 225, dated 1873 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 237 dated 1874, one of a pair located in Digby, Nova Scotia, Canada
- Gun number 255, dated 1873 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 327 dated 1874 – one of a number of examples on iron depression carriages, Gibraltar – from Flickr
- Gun number 507, dated 1875 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 550, dated 1876 on wooden garrison standing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 577, dated 1875 on wooden garrison standing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 581, dated 1876 at Royal Armouries, Fort Nelson, Hampshire, UK
- Gun number 611, dated 1876 on wooden traversing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 615, dated 1877 at Fort Cumberland, New Brunswick, Canada[4]
- Gun number 619, dated 1875 at Royal Armouries, Fort Nelson, Hampshire, UK
- Gun number 622, dated 1875 on wooden garrison standing carriage, Royal Citadel, Plymouth, Devon, UK
- Gun number 774, dated 1877 preserved at Scaur Hill Fort, Bermuda
- Gun number 798, dated 1877 at King's Square, St George Bermuda
- Several guns from HMVS Nelson can be found scattered around the State of Victoria, Australia in public areas, as well as two on military premises at Victoria Barracks, Melbourne, and one at Fort Queenscliff.
Notes
- "58 cwt" refers to the gun's weight rounded up to differentiate it from other "64-pounder" guns : 1 cwt = 112 pounds.
References
- Treatise on Construction and Manufacture of Service Ordnance, 1879, pages 233-238, 292
- 1,230 feet/second firing 64-pound projectile with charge of 8 pounds gunpowder. Treatise on Construction of Service Ordnance 1879, page 94
- Blackmore, H L, (1976). The Armouries of the Tower of London: The Ordnance, (HMSO, London), p91
Bibliography
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to RML 64 pounder 58 cwt Gun. |
- Handbook for the 64 – pr. R. M. L. converted guns of 58 and 71 cwt. L. S., 1887, 1892, 1898, 1902 at State Library of Victoria