Krupp gun

Krupp gun
A 75mm Krupp gun used during the War of the Pacific
TypeArtillery
Place of origin Prussia
 German Empire
Service history
In servicec.1880–c.1938
Used by Prussia
 German Empire
 Austrian Empire
 Austro-Hungarian Navy
 Imperial Japanese Navy
 Chile
Qing dynasty Qing China
 Costa Rica
 Kingdom of Greece
 Honduras
 Korean Empire
 Mexico
 Ottoman Empire
First Philippine Republic First Philippine Republic
Russia Russian Empire
Thailand Siam
Spain Spanish Empire
Paraguay Paraguay
 Venezuela
 Morocco
WarsWar of the Pacific
Philippine Revolution
First Sino-Japanese War
Second Sino-Japanese War
Spanish–American War
Russo-Japanese War
Mexican Revolution
Philippine–American War
First Balkan War
World War I
Spanish Civil War
Donghak Peasant Revolution

The Krupp gun is a family of artillery pieces that was used by several world armies from the nineteenth century onwards.

History

In 1811, Friedrich Krupp founded his cast-steel factory Gusstahlfabrik, but it was his son, Alfred Krupp, who attained notable success.

The principal characteristic of Krupp guns was that they were made of steel at the time when everyone else still used bronze, cast iron and sometimes wrought iron. Alfred Krupp was introduced to the Bessemer process to mass-produce steel by his London agent and friend, Alfred Longsdon, in 1859-60. After a lengthy period of trial and error, this steel was developed to such quality that the royal factory of Woolwich in England acquired steel from Krupp to manufacture guns that conformed to British naval standards.

Also, Krupp was one of the first manufacturers to design practical breechloading guns for army use. In 1856, Fried. Krupp A.G., produced a 9 cm (6-Pfünder-Feldkanone C/61) rifled breechloader of cast steel with a "piston" breech-lock designed by Martin von Wahrendorff, which gave such good results that Prussia adopted steel for making army guns, which made Prussia the first country to do so.

Initially during the 1850s, Krupp developed a breechloading system with a sliding wedge breech block, but, because of problems with escape of gas, it continued to manufacture Wahrendorff breeches until they were able to copy the Broadwell ring design, and that allowed the problem to be solved. The inventor, American engineer Lewis Wells Broadwell (who worked as a sales agent for the Gatling Gun Company in Europe), was not able to enforce his patents in Prussia or get any money from Krupp (which was not unusual for Germany at the time, then-notorious for foreign patent violation). By this means, they developed the best breechloading guns of the time, assisted by Longsdon's patented designs.

Breech closure was achieved by a steel wedge that slid transversely on a short groove at the rear part of the gun. The movement was imparted by a screw mechanism and the gas-check by the Broadwell ring system.

Krupp guns were purchased by the Russian, Austrian, and the Ottoman Empire armies during the 1860s. By the 1870s, they were being purchased by countries all over the world. Naval guns were also rapidly developed; from 1863, guns were being manufactured for several navies, which included those of Austria-Hungary, Empire of Japan, the Ottoman Empire and Prussia, among others.

Krupp also copied the built-up gun invented by John Ericsson and patented by Blakely and Armstrong to manufacture larger artillery pieces.

Krupp 75mm L30 M1909 field gun in San Juan, Argentina

By the 1880s, Krupp had developed an 88mm naval gun and adopted 75mm as the caliber for the army's field and mountain guns. In 1897, when the French 75mm quick-firing gun appeared, Krupp produced the similar 77mm, which was used in World War I.

Krupp mountain guns were also used during the Mexican Revolution and the Spanish Civil War.

Krupp guns were used by the Kingdom of Greece and the Ottoman Empire in the First Balkan War.

Since 1948, according to military sources,[which?] the Honduran Navy has maintained one Krupp cannon, which is the first of its kind made by the company and still in working order, at the Amapala Naval Base on the Pacific coast.

Caliber

At first, the caliber of the Krupp guns was determined by the weight of the projectile in pounds, but, in the 1860s, they began to designate caliber by the diameter of the bore in centimeters or millimeters.

The principal guns between the 1860s and the 1880s were:

Designation Caliber (cm) Weight of barrel (kg) Weight of projectile (kg) Maximum range (m) Muzzle velocity (m/s)
mountain 6 107 2.14 2,500 300
field 7.5 4.3 4,600 465
mountain 7.5 100 4.3 3,000 294
field 7.85 290 4.3 3,000 357
field 8.7 6.8 4,800 465
naval 17 6,000 54.5 4,800 460
coastal 21 9,700 99 3,800 430
naval 24 17,700 160 6,000 582
naval 26 27,700 275 530
naval 30.48 32,000 329 500

See also


This page was last updated at 2023-11-25 08:39 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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