Not on a ship (the Retrokit pic is very good picture of one "dismounted" of course). Here are a couple of it in use as a railway gun. From Railway Artillery - A Report on the Characteristics, Scope of Utility, Etc. - Volume 2 - USA - 1921 United States of America War Office Ordnance Department Document No 2034
Volume 1 has lots of pictues, plans drawings etc (mostly US but some French, German, Austrian etc.) but I don't think of this one.
No doubt about what the War Office book said it was - it said it was a 164. That volume is laid out in sequence but I didn't look past the pages for the 164 to see what they had about the 194 (if anything). Could be in error of course.
Here is a pic of the Léon Gambetta which had both 164 and 194 in twin turrets. Not a lot in it, I would have to admit - forward turret is the 194 of course. Picture has one level of zoom if your browser is enabled.
Incidentally, the picure in the Wikipedia article linked by PDA is the same as the one in Jane's Fighting Ships of World War I, in the entry for the Suffren, which picture is same size and only slightly/marginally clearer than the Wikipedia one - seems they couldn't find a better shot of it.
Ah yes, they have quite a bit on 19cm/194mm howitzers and guns, I don't think they mixed those up with the 164. Apparently I can post the link (one of those Scribid things which mostly annoy by coming up in searches but not giving full access to content - but this one is different, it says "full", as in full access):
far as I know the 164 has a shorter barrel, approx 150cm shorter than the 194. There must have been an older Model 1875 194mm howitzer too, also a former coastal defence gun put on a railway carriage.
far as I know the 164 has a shorter barrel, approx 150cm shorter than the 194. There must have been an older Model 1875 194mm howitzer too, also a former coastal defence gun put on a railway carriage.
At first we were talking about the Model 1893 164mm naval gun which was available to be pressed into service as a coastal defence and as a railway gun (or as a railway gun for coastal defence). That was 45 cal barrel length. There was a later model with a 46 cal barrel I think. That one probably stayed on the ships.
The link I showed for the Léon Gambetta also showed her 194mm main guns as well as her 164 mm guns. Those 194s were also 45 cal so the difference in those twp would be about 135 cm. But I don't know if the 194 was put into railway gun service.
The American book shows different models and different barrel lengths of 194 mm gun, and that's in addition to the 194 mm howitzer (models 1875, 1876 and 1878). The 194 mm guns listed are models 1887, 1893, 1896 and 1902. They are described as seacoast guns. There's a drawing showing that the difference in those was the barrel length, increasing with the model number. Somewhere around 1896 or 1902 that barrel length looks about 45 cal to me, or maybe 46. But then they show a "model 1870, 1893" 194 mm mounting where the 1870 seems to come out of nowhere. In any event, the fitting of the 194s is varied but quite different to that of the 164s.
But we weren't talking about the 194mm - except if it might be confused with the 164 mm. I know the pictures I showed were what the Americans identified as the 164 mm naval gun, used as a railway gun. I think they're right but I am a total novice with artillery. Well, with most thing really. But I'm interested.
Do you still think that was not the Model 1893 164mm naval gun?
Ironsides wrote:
Hi Rectaglia heres some more... same book but 8.6mb download pics look ok...
That's great Ivor, thanks. Tossing up now whether I need to retain a copy. The problem is, many of these great links get broken as time goes by and the only surety is to keep a local copy ... oh well, it's only storage space and 8.6 mb is worth about one-sixth of a cent at today's rates. Probably half that with next year's hardware.
But we weren't talking about the 194mm - except if it might be confused with the 164 mm. I know the pictures I showed were what the Americans identified as the 164 mm naval gun, used as a railway gun. I think they're right but I am a total novice with artillery. Well, with most thing really. But I'm interested.
Do you still think that was not the Model 1893 164mm naval gun?
Hi Steve, I am no expert either. The question came by seeing the pictures. All was not intended to deny or contradict, only puzzled.
whilst looking for more information of the 164-194 railwayguns I found this patent... as you're a keen patent-finder I was thinking automatically in your direction. It's an electric powderless gun..as far I can decipher the Sutterlin script it all works on electro magnetic pulses of 'ungeheure Kraft', very promising for modern war fare. The inventor was a mr. Foster of the US.
-- Edited by kieffer on Wednesday 25th of August 2010 03:19:13 PM
Oh it would work OK - it is just a crude linear motor but poorly conceived. There is no need for a massive breach end, a simple tube is all that is needed. Unless one was concerned a cunning foe might sneak up to the muzzle-end and fire a shot back the other way at the gun crew (it is potentially a bi-directional arrangement, depending which end is loaded). Just at a guess, a scale model of 20mm bore and using a 12V car battery might achieve a muzzle velocity of 2-4 m/s. It is just like a solenoid with the moveable core (slug) being passed on to successive coils.
Add some more coil and contact stages, use thicker wire with more windings and big capacitors to boost the current through those and who knows what you might get from the power supply of a humble 12 V battery? Maybe 20 m/s! If you could make the final coil massive and feed alternating current through it instead of direct current you could maybe heat the projectile to incandescence and have an incendiary-tracer adaptation so simply.
I vote we elect Hughbearson to commence trials forthwith
Theres a rifle as well but i think its poorly concieved imagine having to carry a large battery around, no dought someones patented a solar powered version somewhere...
Mr.Foster was convinced his patent would work. There should have been some overheating problem but as the whole process of electric pulses would run very fast, with short blasts, Foster saw no difficulties in that. There were a lot of springs involved too, cutting of the pulses... All was intended for small guns on war vessels, to get rid of the 'unhealthy clouds of gun smoke'. Actually it wasn't Foster's idea though he patented it. A mr. Birkelund was a few years ahead, same Birkelund who discovered the proces of making nitrogen from air. I think the Germans used that in ww1 when guano became scarse.
You can throw something faster/further than at 20 m/s. But it could break window glass. A linear motor/accelerator has only the theoretical limit of the speed of light (with frictionless passage of the projectile in a vacuum, the so-called Gauss gun). Of course it takes infinite energy to get any actual mass to that speed. Convert the entire universe to energy instantly and at one point and still it comes up a little bit short.
But something less ... it is entirely feasible, it has been suggested such a device (or a rail gun, a much refined version) could be used even to boost packages from the moon to any destination. Back on earth velocities of up to 2.4 km/s are reported (which is already equal to the "escape velocity" of our moon's gravity) and construction of designed systems capable of maybe 5.8 km/s has either commenced or is planned. That much kinetic energy (5.8 km/s) is far greater than the effect any HE shell of comparable weight could deliver. Of course the energy "pumped" into such a system is many, many times greater again.
And you could build an awful lot of the Canon de 16cm Mle.1893 - and shells to go with them - for the same money.
P.S. Keiffer - is there any record that he produced a working model? It would not be hard to do (and the switches do not need to be so complicated for a model) though the results would be far from spectacular. Still, they don't have to be for a 'demonstration'. But scaling it up for a practical weapon? Too much power is needed to replicate the performance of even a modest firearm. If the idea is used for any weapon it must be in a "niche" not feasible for conventional arms. Like in extremely high values for weight/mass (there are linear-motor trains already) and/or velocity (as above).
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Thursday 26th of August 2010 06:35:40 AM
And you could build an awful lot of the Canon de 16cm Mle.1893 - and shells to go with them - for the same money.
The word 'battery' gets a connotation then... But don't forget the melt down problem, which is the main problem I think though Foster happily denied that, and apparantly the gun had to be built after he patented the idea. But back to the Canon: this I found in Allied artillery of World War One, by Ian Hogg. The picture is a 194mm Mle 1893 on a Creusot carriage. A table in the book says: barrel length 5.89. The 160mm Piegne Canet is 7.41. More confusion as the 160 has a longer barrel, not shorter as I thought and wrote before. Or is the Piegne Canet another gun (both are mentioned under railwayguns)? Seeing the 164 on the painting, that has clearly a shorter barrel than the 194 and seems logic too. But I also read somewhere that the 16's and 19's weren't so much different in appaerance...
-- Edited by kieffer on Thursday 26th of August 2010 06:52:58 AM
Those barrel lengths you mention are 30 and 45 calibres respectively (50% difference in conformation or shape). But the naval 194 which is in that Léon Gambetta picture is 45 calibres like the naval 164 we are talking about - and when you see the 164 turret and the 194 turret together then those barrels do look very similar. The 194 is the same conformation but actually some 18% larger than the 164. But differences have to be about 15% and more before they are instantly noticeable to most people - so of course they look similar rather than a lot different. Hence there is always the possibility of the two being confused. But that American book seems to keep them apart quite easily (as one would hope, these were professional army ordnance people). Even though one of the several 194s they talk about has a 45 calibres barrel length. So I still think the railway gun pictures I posted first up are of the 164, not of the 194.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Thursday 26th of August 2010 07:18:35 AM
The two photographs show the "Canon de 16 cm modèle 1893 sur affût-truck tous-azimuts Schneider", two made in 1916 and two more in 1918.These four guns were rearmed with 16 cm Mle 1893-96 guns in 1919.Others 16 cm railway guns were made in 1918: four guns of 1893-96 M model. The "big" Guns of french Army are depicted in my small book "Les Canons de la Victoire-tome 2-L'Artillerie Lourde à Grande Puissance" publisher "Histoire et Collections"-Paris-2008. The book show 59 different big guns, mostly Railway Guns, each model is exposed with at least two photographs (95 mm railway gun to 520 mm modèle 1916). I love very much Ian Hogg books, but if his books on British and German artilleries are great and "classic" books, his chapters on french heavy artillery are very often wrong for the story of french big guns! Yours sincerely, Guy François.
I think so, as said in my first sentence. Mercifully Guy François (merci Guy), who knows the subject, seems to agree. The picture Retrokits is referencing is http://www.retrokit.net/images/72057photo.jpg?966 for anyone lacking the stamina to retrieve our starting point
P.S. I don't see that installation is actually safe to fire as depicted but that's a minor point - I was a 'ginger beer' (sapper) not a 'drop-short' (gunner). And yes, I know what 'ginger beer' means in Cockney rhyming slang - that was a calumny started by the 'drop shorts and bend overs'.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Saturday 28th of August 2010 02:20:19 AM
My stamina has been totally depleted, Rectalgia. My apologies for being snippy.
Very nice pic, kieffer, may I ask where it's from; I am hunting around for new books to read. Your pic also gives ideas for a diorama setting for Retrokits' kit. Thanks.
the picture is from an old magazine, The War Pictorial, Ill. London News and Sketch Ltd, vol. december 1917. Many are 'retouches', worked over and not very crisp, some are better. May be the IWM has the photo in its collection now?
No offence taken, no apology needed. I know I do yammer on - my member name is hard-earned and well warranted I'm afraid
Importantly, the Retrokits' model should make a great focal point for a diorama of authentic historical interest, another unexpected aspect* of the conflict rescued from obscurity by the modelling fraternity. And Kieffer's picture seems to confirm the mounting detail shown in the Retrokits pic. Both those pictures give the impression it was used at comparatively short ranges for a fixed emplacement/low-mobility gun (not a lot of muzzle elevation available). *Usually these are not risked so far forward.
This Retrokit is one of my next projects. So I`m still searching for good pics which shows me some more details. I also look for old pics which shows this canon in interesting fireposition on front...
Who can help???
Pics which shows a big cruiser using this guns are not good help for detailing, cause the Retrokit-constructionplan is not the best. I also can`t find much about it on web...
Cheers Stefan
-- Edited by Stefan Szymanski on Tuesday 7th of September 2010 07:05:26 AM
I don't know this is much help, as I am even not sure which gun this is. It's from an old book, it only says this is a Belgian/English operated railway gun. But may be some inspiration if you're planning to build a model?
For me it seems that isn`t a 16cm Mle. 1893 gun. I don`t need pics which shows this gun in action on railway. I want to build a natural fixed fireposition. I´m also very thankfull for getting detail pics which shows the gun on every side...
...I´m also very thankfull for getting detail pics which shows the gun on every side...Stefan
Hi Stefan, just to understand - the pictures, repeating links, from Kieffer's earlier post (probably need to be logged in to follow that one) and from Retrokit are the sort of thing you want, but you want more? I'm surprised, I thought those two might be sufficient. I'm sure if anyone has more they will post them but they seem to be a little hard to find.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Tuesday 7th of September 2010 08:53:00 AM
This pics are very fine and I need pics like this. By searching in web I only find three (!) pics like this (including the Retrokit-Cover-pic). But I need more. So I want to see more details. For example the left side of the canon, which shows the mechanismus of service. I know the problem is to find more pics like that...
Found on Wikimedia Commons two photos from Der Weltkrieg im Bild of 16 cm Mle 1893 (or 1893-96) on a land sliding carriage (did I translated affût à châssis right?):
Obviously the artillery position below is the same as on the photo posted earlier by kieffer. Luckily both photo are dated (respectively 23 November 1916 and 2 December 1916).
Maybe respected Guy François or anybody else can identify place where the photos were made?