I was a gunner on an amphibious ship with 4 3inch/50 twin mounts on board. I can remember repainting the guard walls after firing exercises from brass shell casings striking it. They showed it in an open environment on video. In an enclosed mount with twins. It is a big difference. God bless all our servicemen and women. I will never forget you
@buckstarchaser23763 жыл бұрын
...and here, 70 years later and I don't have an autoloading, high-rate-of-fire coffee machine.
@imouse32463 жыл бұрын
Perhaps if your coffee machine went to war?
@privatecustomer8 жыл бұрын
My Dad was stationed in Southern France aboard the Salem in 1956 and when the ship was in port my two brothers and I got a chance to see these guns from inside the turrets go through these same exercises. For a 5 yr old it was LOUD. Never knew the significance of these guns until I started studying the literature of the USS Salem. I have many memories of approaching the ship miles off shore, climbing the stairs to the deck, eating in the officer's mess, watching cartoons and a movie.
@mrichar98 жыл бұрын
awesome!
@jackyandell24893 жыл бұрын
Climbing the ladder...they're are no stairs on a ship
@chriscunningham97402 жыл бұрын
@@jackyandell2489 As a voulnteer aboard the USS Salem museum in Quincy, MA, they are ladder-stairs. Too steep for stairs, too shallow for ladders.
@Pienimusta6 жыл бұрын
Damn HE spammers behind an island.
@FinnishedThirdMusic6 жыл бұрын
eikä oo radar viel käytössä, ja damage control käytetty 15 sekuntia sitten...
@derickvo3175 жыл бұрын
God damn the AA us too strong
@kujousara1015 жыл бұрын
lool
@Just_A_Random_Desk4 жыл бұрын
@@derickvo317 i wish that was true rn
@michaelc.58094 жыл бұрын
Lmfaoo
@DM3MD558 жыл бұрын
Nice piece on the 3"/50. I was a Mount Captain for one of two twin enclosed mounts while serving aboard the USS Spartanburg County. I used to know the gun like the back of my hand. Hot Gun/Cold Gun Misfire procedures are still permanently burned into my brain. Thanks for bring back good memories when I was a young man.
@ZodiacSam8 жыл бұрын
I was a primary loader and surface sight setter on USS Concord (AFS 5).
@godbluffvdgg8 жыл бұрын
Cool story! :)...
@robertdunkes34997 жыл бұрын
Timothy Samples USS Speigel Grove LSD 32 here, Gunners Mate Guns , mount 3 local anti aircraft. Twas a bad ass gun.
@stevewonder106 жыл бұрын
Whats the rate of fire
@charlieorth31736 жыл бұрын
What year were you on the Sparkle C?
@MakeMeThinkAgain8 жыл бұрын
As usual, you get the ultimate cruiser gun system just before cruiser guns became obsolete.
@mikehalvorsen7528 жыл бұрын
Not quite obsolete...this film was made in the late 1940's. I got to see what those 8-inch guns could do against a North Vietnamese regiment. The NVA regiment lost that one...and that was in the 1972. The cruiser was the USS Newport News.
@MakeMeThinkAgain8 жыл бұрын
Mike Halvorsen I hadn't know that. Scary to contemplate. I was just thinking how useful these guns would have been in 1942. By the time the USN started receiving new heavy cruisers most of the fighting featuring heavy cruisers was over. They were mostly used as AAA protection for carrier groups.
@tonytrotta93228 жыл бұрын
IN WW2: The older Battleships & older Cruisers did the Majority of the Bombardment for the newer Battleships & newer Cruisers screened & protected the fast Carriers! Great footage shown here! The older Battleships & older Cruisers were in the greatest ship to ship naval battle ever - SURIGAO STRAIT!
@tonytrotta93228 жыл бұрын
My dad who is 92 years old and was on the Heavy Cruiser USS Louisville CA 28 from 1943-46: USS LOUISVILLE CA- 28 Heavy Cruiser 1944-45 1 - Extensive shelling Island of Wotje in Marshalls. 2 - Bombardment Roi & Namur Islands. 3 - Led gunfire support Eniwetok Island. 4 - Bombarded Palaus Island. 5 - Bombarded Truk & Sawatan. 6 - 11 days of continued fire support Siapan. 7 - Bombarded Tinian & Guam. 8 - Enter Leyte Gulf - support major allied invasion force & shelled shore installations for 7 straight days. 9 - Battle of Surigao Strait - Flagship for Rear Admiral Jesse Oldendorf. 10 - Support landings at Lingayen Gulf. Hit by (2) kamikaze & killed Rear Admiral Theodore Chandler & many sailors. 11 - Fire support for Okinawa. Hit by another Kamikaze. 12 - Delivered Bull Halsey’s officers & staff - (150) to USS Missouri. 13 - Continued fire support duties. 14 - War ends. 15 - Escorted surrendered Japanese ships from Tsingato, China to Jinsen, Korea.
@Mishn08 жыл бұрын
Well, to be fair, that's what "ultimate" literally means. It means "last". The definition of the word actually has nothing to do with quality.
@earlphillips97547 жыл бұрын
When I transfered from the deck force to the gun gang, the first class told me if ever I droped a 3inch round I was supposed to pick it up real fast and throw it over the side. Well guess what one day we were dry cycling dummy rounds thriugh the loading system. I droped a round. I quickly picked it up and threw it over the side. My nmae became Dummy Round the rest of the time I spent on that ship. This was 1962 on the USS Suribachi AE21.
@jimfrits3347 жыл бұрын
Earl Phillips --funny story! I spent my enlistment on the USS Parsons DD 949 from 1962 to 1964 as a FT.
@TXARNGarmy15X6 жыл бұрын
Well, you did as you were told!
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
Oh, you poor devil. I was on the Great Shitcan as we liked to call her. AE17 out of Bayonne New Jersey...the cesspool of the country.
@senpaisanchoyt52256 жыл бұрын
care to explain to civie?
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
@@senpaisanchoyt5225 What would you like explained? I was on the sister ship of the Salem. (See my post below).
@EvilMerlin4 жыл бұрын
Des Moines-class heavy cruisers were bad asses. Glad this one is still just down the street from me.
@t26e443 жыл бұрын
You also in Quincy?
@EvilMerlin3 жыл бұрын
@@t26e44 Other side... grew up not too far, Plymouth.
@dennisjohnson85903 жыл бұрын
I served on the USS Des Moines CA 134 (Daisy Mae)1959-1961 one hell of a nice ship.
@jagreb3 жыл бұрын
You should volunteer aboard her!
@chriscunningham97402 жыл бұрын
@@jagreb I do!
@myroslavnesysiuk7308 жыл бұрын
Autoloading 203mm guns. This gets Orkz seal of approval
@MajesticDemonLord6 жыл бұрын
Needs a Red paint job though....
@bloodrave95784 жыл бұрын
@@MajesticDemonLord and paint da shells yellow so dey make a bigga boom
@akshayjb82054 жыл бұрын
Stil Nat Enauf More DAKKAAAAA
@spinocus4 жыл бұрын
DA BEST GUNZ!
@d0d0birdiexd784 жыл бұрын
FOYA EVERYTING BOYZ SHOOT DA ZAP KANNONZ SHOOT DA TORPEEDOEZ SHOOT DA MEGA GUNS! THROW SOME GROTS AT EM TA COVA THEIR WINDOWZ SO THEY CAN’T SEE US!
@chrismaverick982810 ай бұрын
Drachinifel had a tour last year of the Salem and got a good look at the 8" guns in his video. So fantastically designed. It's a shame they never saw the enemy they were designed for even once.
@mannyfernandez70287 жыл бұрын
This is the era when every round had the words 'to whom it may concern' written on it.
@packr729 жыл бұрын
The finest heavy cruisers every built, bar none.
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
Yeah, except for the Newport News, which now has a museum on board the Salem. The NN was a later design and had a couple "tweaks" that gave her an advantage, such as loading speed of the turret guns.
@Cpt_Boony_Hat6 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't NN just be like a Long Hull Essex same class slightly better
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
@@Cpt_Boony_Hat The Essex was a carrier in WW2, later the name was given to an LDH.
@Cpt_Boony_Hat6 жыл бұрын
No I was referring to a sub varient of the class. You said Newport News was its own class when last I checked it was Des Moines class
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
@@Cpt_Boony_Hat I just re-read my post and that is NOT what I said. It was indeed a Des Moines class heavy cruiser but by all measures, it was in a class by itself. At the time I was on board her, she was the most dangerous all-gun heavy cruiser in the world. And why are you trying to discuss submarines in a video about heavy cruisers?
@johngori94774 жыл бұрын
As a former USN Gunnery Officer I would frequently have given a lot to have something larger than a 5"/54 main battery. 8" with cased ammo would have been sweet, but even a converted Army 155mm long barrel (preferably with a modified, larger volume powder) would have been fine. As for the 3"/50, the less said the better. I wonder how many film takes they had to do to get half a dozen rounds to fire without a stoppage? They were generally a maintenance headache and "less than fully reliable"...just what you don't want in an anti-aircraft gun. Thankfully, my 2 ships had been re-equipped with 20mm CIWS so I could watch the commodore blister the other ships in the squadron when their 3" didn't work. Even more thankfully one of my CIWS techs had gotten factory-trained by the manufacturer and knew all the built-in maintenance & test modes that the Navy didn't teach C-school trained technicians so our CIWS availability ran between 97 and 99% and I never had both mounts down at the same time.
@life_with_bernie4 жыл бұрын
Not sure what ship your 3"/50s were on, sir, but the 3"/50s I worked on had exactly one stoppage during my time aboard, and that stoppage was due to a shattered recoil spring, something BuNavOrd said they'd never heard of happening before. It was later put down to being caused by an overcharged round. Regular maintenance by well-trained gunners led by involved and driven gunnery chiefs and division officers not afraid of getting grease on their hands was the key to keeping those guns firing smoothly, sir.
@raymondwiederhold68974 жыл бұрын
My ship got 3" in 1954 - We had the same jamming problems- Our GMs liked the 40s much better
@MUJUNKY2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if that CIWS tech is the reason your Phalanx shot so well, I've consistently heard the moniker of "Captain It Won't Shoot" for the 20mm rotary guns, both land-based and sea. I have a feeling improper cleaning plays a large part in that. A high school buddy of mine had a cousin that went to Iraq as a C-RAM operator, so the sand couldn't have been good, and at sea you have non-stop salt spray to corrode the motors and ammunition feed.
@johngori94772 жыл бұрын
@@MUJUNKY the factory tech was most certainly key to keeping them both up and running. At that time at least there were a number of troubleshooting modes that existed in the system that the general Dynamics factory reps knew from their factory training but the Navy training pipeline didn't teach the Navy techs. Not sure if that was GD trying to make a little extra money by concealing those Modes existence or the Navy being dumb about their training. But our guy has an ex-factory tech knew about those modes used them and taught other people to use them.
@richardcheese4722 Жыл бұрын
@@MUJUNKY we had the m61 in the usn A-7E Corsair2. As far as keeping the gun running you had to use it frequently to keep it operational. We went about 6 months without running any gun in the squadron. Getting them up and running reliably took about 4 months. The G forces wreak havoc. The magazine sits behind the pilots back and theres about 4-5' of feed chute to the gun near the nose landing gear. The drive gears and feed chute were our biggest headaches. Once we got things sorted the final issue tended to be tweaking the feed chute. Once we got them fully sorted they pretty much ran trouble free so long as got to eat on a regular basis. Once in awhile a hard trap or overzealous aviator would bend the feed chute. Our aircraft type tended to be spotted on the bow so the corrosion issues are familiar.
@Pooglump6 жыл бұрын
I was gun captain on Mount 51, an open-tub 3" 50 aboard the USS Mahan '69-71. Kind of fun to see the 'mount in full action' in the video. Ours never operated that smoothly. These twin mounts were so loud, so jerky (under fire control) and so hot (everyone had crispy eyebrows when we were done), not to mention ship rolling, that it was almost impossible to keep them firing continuously. Between hanging on and being scared half to death of the loading mechanism (ours were different than the ones in the video), it was all you could do to throw the rounds at the pawls that grabbed them and hope they 'stuck'. Lots of dropped rounds, but amazingly few actual loader malfunctions. If the ship was rolling, the empties would start rolling around tripping guys, too. LOL. I suppose if our lives depended on it, the efficiency would have been better. But all we ever fired at was sleds.
@lelandgaunt99852 жыл бұрын
I see
@heartfire4518 жыл бұрын
My great uncle was always called gunner. That was his name to us. I did not know why. I asked him one day. He told me about his service on a ship called the USS Missouri. He said it was Korean War era. But he was a ww2 vet also. I did not know what the USS Missouri was. I was just a kid. He showed me video of the ship firing. My jaw just about hit the floor. At that age I did not know there were guns that big.
@KB98137 жыл бұрын
Hehehe, yeah now you can just go online and watch those 16in rifles fire then go off to Pearl to see her. There is still bigger, Yamato class had 18.1in guns that used 800lbs of propellant to sling a 3,219 lbs shell at 790m/s. I have found a animation of the loading mechanism on youtube and wow it's ingenious, could do a round every 30 seconds AND then there still is BIGGER! The 31in Schwerer Gustav railway gun that thing was just so impractical. The shell is like 10ft tall and one is in the Imperial War Museum. However, guns drools and missiles & aircraft now rule.
@Brett-fn6ks4 ай бұрын
I was fortunate to see/hear the mighty 16 inch guns of the New Jersey at Lady Liberty's birthday in the 80's. Those moments are permanently tattooed in my mind.
@earlphillips97548 жыл бұрын
The first gun I worked on as a young gunnersmate in the early 60's.
@jagreb8 жыл бұрын
Wow! Amazing! Is the video accurate? Could you really maintain 8 rounds per minute per gun? If true, that's one heck of a broadside! Thanks for your service. Edited to add, I was referring to the 8 inch guns by the way. :)
@griffinfaulkner35147 жыл бұрын
Not 8 rounds per minute, upwards of 10, sustainable until you run completely out of ammunition. With automatic radar-ranging and gun-laying via the Mark 1A fire control computer. Do not fuck with USN firepower.
@mr.epicmemerman1315 жыл бұрын
Where they heavy? I always wonder how heavy they are.
@F4Wildcat6 жыл бұрын
Me= nothing beats the bofors 40mm *actually sees 3' in action Hoooooollyyyyy crap......
@thegreyghost58466 жыл бұрын
Gar bofors outranges them
@forcea14546 жыл бұрын
The 3"/70 was better than both. 90-120rpm per minute per barrel.
@spazmonkey21316 жыл бұрын
Stick a belt feed on it
@pyronite595 жыл бұрын
DIRTY TURBAN - getting it stuck in the barrel ends up happening to most of us at some point in time
@HighlanderNorth14 жыл бұрын
No, no, no! Nothing beats a 1903 Springfield bolt action rifle being propped up on a stick by a soldier on the ground and fired at German biplanes and triplanes, one shot at a time! I see NO reason why we'd ever need anything more than a 180gr .30/06 bullet, even against today's mach 2.5+ jet fighters and bombers that often fly several thousand feet higher than the 30/06 bullet could ever hope to reach! We need not these newfangled 20mm and 40mm guns, let alone these "space-age" 3in cannons!! Lol
@MetalMonarchy12 жыл бұрын
that star wheel mechanism is the key way to make large caliber weapons fire incredibly fast. when they develop a way to make the primary anti ship ammunition work like that, those guns could pound any ship to rubble within a few minutes
@AdamosDad5 жыл бұрын
When I was a seaman I was a second loader on one of the 3 inch mounts on USS Newport News (CA-148) We could fire 90 rounds of 8"55's before the first one hit the target and do it while making 33 knots. Vietnam 1968-69.
@AdamosDad5 жыл бұрын
@Jay Barker Great to hear it Jay thanks for your service my brother Mike was in there to, I had a nicer life aboard ship but we did our part. "Fair Winds and Following Seas" Brother .
@AdamosDad4 жыл бұрын
@JAG That's good to hear after all these years. I was one of the guys that set up secure coms with the Marines.We were glad to the job, my younger brother was in the Army there in 69-70 and got shot up pretty bad, to me your brother in law and my brother were hero's. If your brother in law is still with us tell him that I said thanks for your service.
@theoriginalbadbob5 жыл бұрын
I was on a dependant's cruise, in 1958 or 1958, aboard the USS TOLEDO. I used to have a picture of me standing on top of the #2 turret.
@wolfie57774 жыл бұрын
now how often do u find footage of a cruiser or bb turning its turrets and firing
@YellowAquarium4 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile in WoWs: HE spammer: camps behind island USS Des Moines and USS Salem: imma bout to end this mans whole carrier
@jeannemarietrotta86049 жыл бұрын
The Des Moines Class had the rapid fire 8 inch 55 caliber guns & they have a large catcher net to catch the shell casing. There are no nets catching casing in this video. The USS Newport News (Des Moines Class) had a turret explosion killing many sailors & that turret was never used again. The center gun was removed & the turret was locked in position. The ship show firing the 8 inch 55 caliber guns is a Baltimore class heavy cruiser which used (2) powder bags per shell & the whole shell was fired either a 260 lb shell or a 335 lb AP (Armor Piercing) shell. Tony Trotta
@tovoklore63564 жыл бұрын
Well it is possible that it is not a Des Moines class, but I'd argue that it is not a Baltimore either as the superstructure does not match, old or new.
@tonytrotta93224 жыл бұрын
@@tovoklore6356 You maybe correct: Here is a more detail operational Y-tube - at the end the casing comes out of the front of the turret. Later they added catcher nets. kzbin.info/www/bejne/d4mtenhrZc-rmtk. My friend served on the USS Newport News CA-148 in Vietnam.
@joechang86963 жыл бұрын
Somewhere, I read that the decision to switch from the Bofors 40mm to the 3in at the end of WW2 was because the proximity fuse with 5in was very effective. the smallest gun the VT could fit on was 3in. Later, it was also possible on 40mm. the Oerlikon 20mm was credited with many downed aircraft, but usually after it reached weapons release. The 40mm could hit planes before they reached the release point, hence was the favored weapon. The 5in was not much more than nuisance fire until the combination of radar fire control + proximity fuse.
@NucleAri3 жыл бұрын
Huh, I was under the impression the Bofors had a VT fuse soon after the war in testing (for M19 SPAA) but it was the limited range (3-4 miles if inordinately lucky) that rendered it obsolete. Good to know the VT fuse did not, in fact, exist for some time.
@joechang86963 жыл бұрын
@@NucleAri that was my recollection, but be sure, I started looking. the wiki page for the 3"50 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3%22/50_caliber_gun says the 3" started to replace the 40mm from 46 on, and that a proximity fuse was available, but not specifically when. The Bofors 40mm page says the proximity fuse became available in the early 70's. In the WWII, the effective aircraft attack methods were dive bombing and torpedo. the Mk 13 torpedo has a range of 6000yd (runtime just under 6 min), and I imagine recommended release point was much closer. If any one has the tactical data folder for the old 22kt battleships and the newer 27kt BB's, I would like to know turn time, radius & transfer. Dive bomb release point was 1500ft? depending on whether the pilot was inclined to continue flying? I would say that fire control radar and VT rendered both methods obsolete. This made a radar guided missile the only viable method of attacking a warship, also greatly extending the launch range, meaning any gun system was no longer sufficient. It would have been retained to ensure no close approach, as missile systems were not always reliable.
@bengrogan97103 жыл бұрын
@@NucleAri It's a slight crossing of terms - The Bofors began testing Variable fuses programmed by the rangefinder in the way described here, as opposed to the actual VT fuse which was still classified and was infact a proximity detonated shell that contained its own radar
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
I served on the USS Newport News, CA148 and there is a video of her doing shore bombardment in 1972 off the coast of Vietnam. It is one of the most amazing demonstrations of overwhelming fire power you'll ever seen. A projectile explosion due to a malfunction in the center barrel of the #2 turret killed 20 men.
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
The "Gray Ghost from the East Coast". Call sign "Thunder" Notice the small inset during the first 26 seconds. That is eight 5" guns and nine 8" guns. Somewhere there is an aerial video of where those shells were landing and you really didn't want to be there. kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZmWol6Gja86eprM
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
The first 30 seconds of the following video is a sample of what eight 5" guns and nine 8" guns are capable of. Somewhere there is an aerial video of where the shells were landing and you didn't want to be there. kzbin.info/www/bejne/ZmWol6Gja86eprM
@m.streicher8286 Жыл бұрын
Radar directed, gun based, AA never became obsolete I'll die on this hill
@johnparrott46893 ай бұрын
Ask any US pilot during Vietnam if AAA was obsolete…!
@seanc.53107 жыл бұрын
Great video! I have been on this ship many times, the ship is a museum right around the corner from my house.
@mikeschmidt79804 жыл бұрын
where, i would like to go see it
@seanc.53104 жыл бұрын
Mike Schmidt it's located right at the old Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, MA
@dhimasardiansyah87414 жыл бұрын
OTO Melara 76 mm : mama mia i'm proud of you...
@kevinwaddell87206 жыл бұрын
Nowadays weapons systems are more "over the horizon" than "line of sight" in practice.
@CFarnwide3 жыл бұрын
Had no idea they were capable of continuous 720 degree turning. Pretty neat to see!
@KB98137 жыл бұрын
They are forgetting about the VT fuze, thats the main reason for the switch from the Bofors to the 3in AA gun. That radar fuze really kicked ass, for WW2 took about 500-1000 5in rounds from the 5in 38 cal gun to take down an aircarft. With the VT that dropped to just a 100 or less...
@ARCNA4427 жыл бұрын
From the figures I've seen VT dropped the shell count from 600 to 300 given early war fire control systems. Your 100 round figure probably includes late war fire control.
@kimmer68 жыл бұрын
That 8''-55 case is a monster.
@redjive_industries37604 жыл бұрын
kimmer6 I managed to acquire the shell casing for a 5 inch gun shell off of an Arleigh Burke a while back, and I still thirst for an 8 inch casing and a 16 inch to use as a waste paper bin
@GamingPro-py8vt4 жыл бұрын
@@redjive_industries3760 Unfortunately, I don't think the 16 used a casing, just combustable bags.
@ScottKenny19784 жыл бұрын
@@redjive_industries3760 sadly, the 16" guns were bagged powder only. And there were only 3 ships fitted with the 8" cased shells.
@redjive_industries37604 жыл бұрын
*SCREAMS INTERNALLY* ah. I have the absolutely vaguest memory of being on board the New Jersey when I was younger, and seeing a large shell of some sort used as a display in the museum area, to compare in size to, say, my father. Ah well, 'twas a good dream while it lasted.
@ScottKenny19784 жыл бұрын
@@redjive_industries3760 you should still be able to get that 8" shell casing, it's not impossible. Just probably expensive. I'm sure a Gunner's Mate from one of the Des Moines class "acquired" one or two and might be persuaded to sell. Or his family might be persuaded, after he passed. But I think the 8"mk16 is the largest brass cased gun ever made.
@knightlife984 жыл бұрын
These 8" Guns were just plain awesome!!!
@paulmiskinis39883 жыл бұрын
The USS Salem is a museum ship in Boston Massachusetts! She is a cruiser and is a beautiful ship with her teakwood deck!
@peterson70822 жыл бұрын
Slight error, she's in Quincy, depending how "slow" you're driving it's about 8-10min from the South End.
@Roaming_Wolf8 жыл бұрын
Naval gunfire support for amphibious operations will never be out of need. Air power is great but shells don't risk pilots and can put a lot on target quickly. We brought the Iowa's back because we ran the heavy cruisers into the ground. They had an idea to mount an 8" single barrel on a destroyer and it seemed to work. Modern materials would be light enough to make this work. We need to upgrade our gun systems. Missiles cannot be used every time. You cannot jam an incoming "dumb" round. Something to think about.
@jers598 жыл бұрын
+RaveWolf Romel The 8 inch gun mounted on the DD Hull in 1970,s failed for various reasons.
@saltMagic6 жыл бұрын
Guns will never truly be obsolete
@manaboutit15945 жыл бұрын
Point Defense systems have become accurate enough to intercept large caliber shells in flight. The Israelis have a system what I cannot remember the name of that is intercepting MORTAR rounds in flight. Something to factor into the desire for Naval Gunfire support.
@joshlower13 жыл бұрын
@@manaboutit1594 those would not fare well against hundreds of incoming shells
@denysvlasenko18652 жыл бұрын
> Missiles cannot be used every time. Incorrect. Unguided rockets are about as cheap as large shells (e.g. Grads and such), can be fired at much higher rates, and can fly farther. For cases where you need moderately improved accuracy for modest cost increase, they can be equipped with "simple" inertial correction electronics (not a full-fledged guided round, just one which reduces dispersion) and due to much lower G-loads at launch, these electronics would not need to tough enough to survive 20000g -> cheaper. > You cannot jam an incoming "dumb" round. Or incoming "dumb" missile. Large guns are obsolete. 6in~8in is about largest which makes sense. So far, even 8in weapon systems have hard time surviving in today's armies/navies.
@lonebriefcase4 жыл бұрын
I’m so glad KZbin saw fit to put this in my recommended
@oddy16373 жыл бұрын
Just amazing Engineering even at that time.
@still_guns2 жыл бұрын
4:37 best clip of the video
@tahunkwai59796 жыл бұрын
nice now do they have a version that can be mounted on the roof of a 2019 minivan?
@godbluffvdgg8 жыл бұрын
WOW! Awesome mechanics on those rifles! I love these old military produced flicks and love to read stories from the men that served on the same or similar ships! It strange how the narrator calls them "Rifles" I guess anything with lands and grooves is a rifle...I thought they were cannons...USAF 81-85...Our Butlers didn't teach us anything about large bore weapons...:)
@noiwonttellyoumyname.43858 жыл бұрын
Today, 'cannon' tends to refer generically to anything bigger than 50 cal, but historically there were a lot of different names for different types of artillery, and 'cannon' was a specific type of gun. Technically, yes- these are 'naval rifles.'
@bengrogan97103 жыл бұрын
They are called rifles in navies of the time quite often as you could have both rifled barrel or smooth-bores in the same sizes on older ships
@mitchellsmith67726 жыл бұрын
15001 rounds later. No workie.
@ramal57084 жыл бұрын
Des Moines are equipped with both automatic heavy caliber Artillery and AA guns. Best 8 inch gun Heavy Cruisers in the world at that time
@shchorss3 ай бұрын
Forget all time, the Des Moines class are the greatest all-gun heavy cruisers in history
@Nighthawke704 жыл бұрын
The LEXINGTON carrier museum got one of the dual 5-inch DP mounts the DES MOINES carried. I wished they could have gotten one of the 8-inch mounts for display as well...
@Shaun_Jones4 жыл бұрын
Fortunately, there is an entire Des Moines class museum, the USS Salem.
@roccozecca93025 жыл бұрын
Man'.. Gotta' LOVE this gun!!
@sethkimmel73124 жыл бұрын
Wish they had these beauties at all the battles in Iron bottom sound...
@rzid11 жыл бұрын
My dad was a GM and worked on 3"/50 mounts when they were fairly new in the '50s. I was on amphibs that still had 3"/50 mounts that weren't removed until the mid-'90s. Never heard of the 8"/55 being touted as having AA capability before-the 6"/47 yes, but not the 8"/55. Maybe it had the rate of fire but did it have the ammo?
@kuhluhOG5 жыл бұрын
well, the Tirpitz used it's 380mm guns to fire at (and even kill) aircraft, so technically every gun should be capable of it, probably just not as effective as others
@Shaun_Jones4 жыл бұрын
That AA capability just means that you can screw a proximity fuse to the shells and that someone once calculated the firing tables to shoot at planes. It’s possible that some of the people who crewed them didn’t even know about it.
@geographyRyan3 жыл бұрын
I intend on visiting USS Salem someday....
@vernonallen94198 жыл бұрын
I was a gunnersmate on theuss leary ddr879,and workedon the 3in 50.nice gun when it worked.
@johngori94774 жыл бұрын
"When it worked" ... Nail .... head .... hit.... (former USN Gunnery Officer)
@sauronthedarklordofmordor29904 жыл бұрын
5:04 BLOW THEM, RIGHT OUT OF THE SKY. We need this in War Thunder...
@BillyBoze4 жыл бұрын
We already have this in War Thunder... For like more then a year...
@tombratton31964 жыл бұрын
amazing all the power an 8" shell has. Soon or already obsolete. but still cool imo
@Area51UFOGynaecology4 жыл бұрын
cool to see the twin 3 inch gun in action
@jokesonyou13733 жыл бұрын
When the narrator said "to really appreciate this gun..." I thought he was gonna say that you'd have to be on the receiving end! 😂😂😉😂
@josephastier74214 жыл бұрын
2:35 Don't sweep me bro
@flounder276010 жыл бұрын
to answer some people questioning the 8 inch AA capabilities i suggest you think about what that many guns loaded with canister type shot. think 8 inch shot guns.
@TheTrueAdept10 жыл бұрын
Actually the round would be a prox-fused HE shrapnel type.
@flounder276010 жыл бұрын
Aaron Neumann frankly iv seen cannon rounds with both for aa secondary roles for main batteries. plus there is the tactic the bismark used against sword fish too. which was shoot theh water in front of the low flying planes to try and take them out with the water spray. i remember reading some quotes from the guys who engaged the musashi and the musashi used this same tactic and they said that flying through them water sprays was like flying through a wall.
@Weesel718 жыл бұрын
+flounder2760 I understand that HMS RODNEY and NELSON used their 16 inchers in an AA role when needed.
@kimmer68 жыл бұрын
+Weesel71 The Yamato and Masushi could fire San Shiki 18.1 inch 460mm 3000 lb anti aircraft shells. They were beehive incendiary rounds. That's just astounding. Apparently some bursts were caught by USN photographers and pilots said they looked like spectacular fireworks. It was not a successful weapon. The blast from the large caliber guns disrupted all other anti aircraft fire on the ship.
@crow91496 жыл бұрын
1:43 Christ.
@jyralnadreth44425 жыл бұрын
The 8 inch guns would be welcome for NGFS today :) plus they are always handy for CQC >:)
@ArdFromRiA6 жыл бұрын
An impressive work of engineers.
@Ste_Brit2 жыл бұрын
Great video mate. Thanks
@dutchman72164 жыл бұрын
I think it's a shame we no longer have vessels like this one.
@juanmallqui9309 Жыл бұрын
We do, they are just kept as museums
@adikmen0075 жыл бұрын
Those fucking 5 inch guns bro are insanely fast. And the designe on the 8 inch autoloaders are insane
@dkstryker4 жыл бұрын
What a great video! I would love to see this in color!
@mig40685 жыл бұрын
True, false or somewhere between....I lived across from the yard when she was brought home. I was told when a team went to inspect her for use as a museum her interior was in near perfect condition as she was favorite of someone in Norfolk and was kept buttoned up tight with dehumidifiers always running.
@abercrombieblovs20423 жыл бұрын
That's so cool...
@jeannemarietrotta86049 жыл бұрын
The Northampton class CA 26 - CA 31 with (2) powder bags fired the 8 inch 55 caliber guns at 2800 feet per second muzzle velocity with a max. range of 31,860 yards & the fully auto 8 inch 55 caliber guns fired at 2500 feet per second muzzle velocity with a max. range of 31,350 yards. That is 510 yards short of the world war 2 heavy cruisers & velocity was 300 feet per second less. Also, note the USS Newport News had a gun jam & a major turret explosion in 1972 knocking out the turret completely & with the loss on many sailors. Tony Trotta
@otispdriffwood23649 жыл бұрын
+Jeannemarie Trotta The casualty to the NN was not the result of a "gun jam", it was the result of an 8" shell which had been fired detonating in the barrel of the center gun in Turret #2 before it left the muzzle. This type of failure is referred to as a "premature detonation", and in this case, a defective fuze on the shell was responsible for the premature detonation.
@jeannemarietrotta86049 жыл бұрын
+OtisP Driffwood Thank you for the detailed information! Tony Trotta
@dickmartin69029 жыл бұрын
+OtisP Driffwood. Otis is correct. I was a gunners mate on Thunder and finished my enlistment in 1964 just before she made her last Med cruise. I have often told what Otis is saying about the explosion that way. I was in turret two and we held a record for sometime under chief Prefix, a wonderful person.
@jeannemarietrotta86049 жыл бұрын
+Dick Martin Thank you for the information & for your service. I had a friend from Philly that was on the USS Newport News CA 148 prior to the turret explosion. He was part of the helicopter crew on the fantail & was always proud of that large ship with her large guns & nice lines! Tony Trotta
@tonytrotta93228 жыл бұрын
+Jeannemarie Trotta I just found out from the USS Louisville CA 28 Wikipedia site that an 8 inch turret was found in the Nevada Desert along with the below link story. www.independentnews.com/news/mystery-in-the-desert-is-a-mystery-no-more/article_a7a8e6c4-fc66-11e5-85c9-3b9a185e5a6d.html#.VxjqIN1Cunw.email
@Ian-mj4pt2 ай бұрын
Im curious what does that part of the system do where they have the point of the shell prior to putting it in the breach to fire does it set something in the projectile .
@dapc7772 жыл бұрын
~was a loader and passer on Mount 31 on the USS R K Turner DLG-20 until they took me off as I was a commissaryman and the crew needed to be fed~never went back there to do that duty again~
@MIck-M3 жыл бұрын
Awesome guns. What colours do they come in, and are they safe for the kiddies?
@lelandgaunt99852 жыл бұрын
Yes
@TheKilroyman10 ай бұрын
Is the vessel predominantly featured in this footage actually the Salem?
@PhillinFreeTime2 жыл бұрын
It seems to me this video was made with the intention of persuading the public that we needed to keep our fleet at or close to, WW2 strength as one of the first things the government wanted to do was essentially strip the navy down to bare bones. This was the big fight between the navy, the public and Washington that ultimately ended with the Navy being stripped and a great chunk of it "mothballed" and also when the Air Force became its own thing instead of being under the Army. Sad to think that had the Navy been allowed to maintain its strength that we may have had a lot more historical museum ships these days but since the navy didn't need them anymore after the strip down, they blew most of them in A bomb tests which is heartbreaking. Not as heartbreaking as the original Enterprise being scrapped but definitely heartbreaking none the less.
@kurtsherrick20666 жыл бұрын
The Salem played the part of the Admiral Graf Spee in the movie In Search of the Graf Spee.
@johnhardman35 жыл бұрын
The "Salem"'s crew still wore their U.S. pale-blue helmets in the deck-shots of the "Salem" that were used in the "Graf Spee" picture: the "Spee"'s producers couldn't get them to wear German helmets and/or uniforms for the filming.
@derrickubay-ubay95033 жыл бұрын
Imagine 16 inch guns with Mark 16 automatic loaders.
@soldiermark90593 жыл бұрын
That would be too Op
@tomisaho35359 жыл бұрын
dang serious firepower!
@MostHigh7774 жыл бұрын
It's Shell was bigger than the 40 mm but the rate of fire was much less so I wonder which gun had more steel in the air per minute?
@markusbarak83304 жыл бұрын
We need to bring back an armored big gun cruiser like this.
@emosijougavule25613 жыл бұрын
Damn ...rapid fire system just like in WOWs
@douglasmiller86074 жыл бұрын
those rapid fire 3 in would be useful now in the Persian gulf. dependence on missiles, two or three CIWS mounts aren't going to provide sufficient fire coverage.
@bengrogan97103 жыл бұрын
That is why other CIWS systems like the 35mm Skyguard or 40mm Dardo came to be
@jagreb12 жыл бұрын
Great vid. Salem was/is a great ship.
@capivara4503 жыл бұрын
I agree
@Richard-kj4gu4 жыл бұрын
THIS IS FIREPOWER!!!!
@billmee46286 жыл бұрын
I wish our guys had these in 1941.
@dundonrl4 жыл бұрын
The Navy used a single 8" 55 on the USS Hull DD-945. It looked rediculous on that 3000 ton Forrest Sherman class destroyer. The Navy SHOULD have used that same 8"55 on the 7000 ton Arleigh Burke DDGs!
@fordhamdonnington27382 жыл бұрын
If only hard hat Harry was still around to get his hands on these videos...
@EleosGamoto3 жыл бұрын
>build absolute SOUL vessel with the latest in naval gunnery >Rapid triple 8's >quickly replaced by soulless missile tech what could have been bro's.
@DaviesMartinezBeats5 жыл бұрын
Keep The Fleet to Keep The Peace.....
@Xander_Zimmermann5 жыл бұрын
Are these casings for sale?
@barriewright28574 жыл бұрын
Very impressive ! .
@bradjohnson47874 жыл бұрын
That was our main gun, USS Hammerberg DE 1015.
@masonxlives5922 Жыл бұрын
Impressive!
@dickyfisher92497 жыл бұрын
The Salem is a floating Museum now. If ya in Mass. its up in Hingham Harbor off Rte. 228.
@ytubepuppy6 жыл бұрын
With part of the museum dedicated to the USS Newport News, CA148.
@MetalMonarchy12 жыл бұрын
im not sure. its old but theres probably loads of them floating about in the world so eehhhh. but its alot of brass so thats a plus. fair value maybe :)
@gunnergoz9 жыл бұрын
And today's US Navy proudly presents the Littoral Combat Ship. Er, when it works. If it works. Sporting a popgun.
@fakiirification8 жыл бұрын
+gunnergoz you mean the clitoral failboat? i really hope someone was fired for that horrid mess.
@Vermiliontea8 жыл бұрын
+gunnergoz Different times, different budget, different enemy, different mission, different needs. If push comes to shove, the Navy has other ships for that.
@PaiSAMSEN8 жыл бұрын
6 times the size of Visby class, with same capability.
@Tk39978 жыл бұрын
It's almost like a ship required to have greater range and operational independence ends up needing more tonnage is fuel, engineering, and personnel facilities for the same amount of weaponry as a corvette that will never leave home waters. This is a stupid comparison anyway a PT boat carried half the torpedo load of a full sized destroyer, do you think that made it half as effective as a destroyer? Particularly in a modern ship there's a hell of allot more to capability then guns. Also I was unaware Visby class had embarked helicopters, anti-mine capabilities, or ANY form of surface to air missile (this was considered but cancelled). and tonnage already allocated for growth including expanded ant-aircraft. The delay in getting modules that had more potent ant-air or anti-ship weaponry onto the LCS is a legitimate criticism, but the tonnage is there for future growth. The current planes already call for the later ships in the class to carry at least eight or so full sized ASM each. It also ignores that the USN can afford to have lower capability ships for less important jobs, if it needs a DDG or a CG it has literally a about ten times more of those then any navy not called China or Russia (it only has like twice to four times as many as them). Not every ship needs to be a billion dollar multi-role monster fuck if anything that's the PROBLEM, so many of our weapon systems end up getting bogged down trying to do so much shit and being gold plated. The military really can't win if it tries to make something bare bones and cheap people bitch that it's 'vulnerable' and 'under-equipped' if they try to make something super advanced people bitch that it's 'unrealistic' and 'overly complex'.
@Tk39978 жыл бұрын
Also fun fact when Visby was accepted the fucking ASM weren't even operation yet, it was YEARS before the 'version 5' upgrade enabled them to be used.
@reedsilvesan21974 ай бұрын
This was the 1st cased large gun for the U.S. Germany's large gun in WWII were all cased charges, up to and including the largest.
@exJacktar9 жыл бұрын
Nice guns there.
@carolmpetersonrn9 жыл бұрын
Damn I going down and reenlist.
@TheMemeDynamics3 жыл бұрын
Well, the new 3 inches was never enough! So they started to fire 8 inches for AA purposes
@wildzeromusic3 жыл бұрын
the air crabs are buzzing
@Christopher-N3 жыл бұрын
Nice demonstration. The uploader forgot to trim the end of the video file; almost a minute length of nothing.
@gamelanpetrus53923 жыл бұрын
Se podía cargar dede dos lados. Se podía cargar mientras se disparaba. Extraordinario
@firefox59267 жыл бұрын
be nice if you could ripple fire them from stem to stern and adjust the fall of shot along the way
@bfrobin4465 жыл бұрын
It might have been possible to do something like that at knife-fighting ranges (within a couple of kilometers). At long range, your rate of fire while you're trying to adjust is limited by shell travel time (half a minute or more on these guns). So it was better to do ranging shots the old-fashioned way: fire one full salvo at a time so you can easily see the average of where all of the shells are landing. Then once you decided to accept the solution and fire for effect, you could have four or five full broadsides in the air before the first shells landed.
@bengrogan97103 жыл бұрын
@@bfrobin446 Even faster than that - The radar systems by that point had become accurate enough that they where convinced that they could achieve 1st salvo effect To make sure of this they tended to have the 1st 6 salvos in the air - fired in 4 or 5 round half salvos staggered to fall on target as the computer calculated, then the next 5 to fall incrementally shorter This is because the radar was good enough to detect shell splashes - If you can't detect a splash that means it's behind the enemy and you are too long - the 1st one you detect is therefore too short
@crestofstar12 жыл бұрын
Impressive high firing speed.
@capivara4503 жыл бұрын
Wow
@michaelc.58095 жыл бұрын
Wait they had remote control back then?!
@michaelc.58094 жыл бұрын
@ensitu cool
@Urbicide Жыл бұрын
The WW2 B-29 had remotely controlled .50 cal machine gun turrets. The gunners used optical devices that were slaved to the guns. Where they looked, the mg's pointed to. These kind of looked like the permanently mounted binoculars you find at tourist attractions, where you put a coin into a slot, & get a minute of view time. They were wired into a mechanical computer that took in the various angles & converted automatically into a firing solution for the guns. The guns could be assigned to a specific gunner with the flip of a switch.
@jamesdewer4 жыл бұрын
Those could easily have used a blast shield. "pouring them in" look at that muzzle blast and the dudes coveralls. Practically blowing them off.