Certainly looks like the Mle 1893/96 in WW1 configuration to me (though there were surely variations of carriage improvised but not necessarily documented in full). Anyway - see http://www.scribd.com/full/36347589?access_key=key-1j7vww0qy16j7tzl6s0h Section 65 (page 45) et seq. (fairly slow to load). Not a perfect match, I must admit (the carriage side girders look to be sort of upside down on the model and the barrel is far longer than the pictures or drawing show). Scads of others are shown (which is why it's slow ...) if you have the stamina to eliminate them by inspection.
Maybe closer to the 305mm Mle 1893/96 (section 154, page 80) on reflection - very similar/same mount and overall gun size looks much much closer. But again the strange "inversion" of the side girders. Je ne sais pas.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Tuesday 16th of November 2010 07:16:18 AM
I'm not sure it is a WW1 artillery piece - the Schneider and St Chamond mountings had a fairly primitive system of wooden blocks which could be winched down onto rails laid beside the tracks. The idea was that the gun, supported by the blocks, slid along the auxiliary rails absorbing the recoil. It worked surprisingly well, even the 305mm gun only slid back about 80cm when it was fired.
The model seems to have recoil cylinders which the WW1 guns didn't have.
I think the scribd URL is the US Army report on Railway Guns published in 1920 (or so).
Charlie, the US Army book is dated 1922 and certainly could include a few post-war innovations though that would be unlikely I think - particularly for France. With the possible exception of the USA I think we're pretty-much looking at WW1 armaments in those pages, indeed the preface makes it plain that the work is addressing design questions raised in the war and "the lessons" of the war, the initial work was done in 1918 and subsequent expansion of the text remains focussed very much on the WW1 equipment.
And yes, the model PDA shows apparently incorporates in part a sliding mount but not quite like the wartime versions described in the book (and those had no recoil/recuperation cylinders as you say). The wartime mounting problems are discussed in the book (under the 305) and it is entirely believable that the French went on to address those problems, once they were over the immediate traumas of the war (and to the extent that the great depression allowed much opportunity).
So, it's looking more like a post WW1 development, isn't it. Almost certainly the Mle 1893/96 gun (but 305mm) but probably on a post-war carriage mount. So, most likely not another WW1 model PDA. But tantalisingly close!
Nice one Charlie, duelling savoury spreads. I confess I was tempted ...
[edit] Ah, I now see the St Chamond mount DID employ recoil cylinders (buffers really) - 2 x about 15 inch, as the American source says. As the book says (p45, concerning the 240mm):
67. Recoil system. This mount, as mentioned above, has top-carriage recoil. Counter recoil is by gravity. The gun is suspended in a heavy cast saddle, which in turn is supported on the rolling gun carriage. This recoils up rails rising toward the rear with an inclination of 4 degrees. These rails are carried on a racer in which the recoil cylinders are installed. These cylinders are two in number and are about 15 inches in diameter. Each is attached inside the front of the racer at a point about 42 inches below the gun by means of a 6-inch pin, about which the cylinder is free to revolve in a vertical plane. Each piston is similarly attached to the gun carriage in such a position that its axis is approximately parallel to the inclined rails. This form of attachment, however, makes the buffer self-aligning and more distinctly a separate mechanism than on any other mounts examined. On this account continual inquiries were made as to whether the design had ever been found defective. All of the officers who had handled artillery of this type were positive that no difficulties had ever been experienced with the buffers.
Now this design was originally for the 305mm but found to be too limiting. Since the real work of recoil absorption was by the "rolling gun carriage" within the saddle, there was a severe limit on the elevation and propellent charge that could be used with the heavier gun (almost double the range was obtained with the alternative war-time sliding mount). It's all in the book. Hence my current supposition/agreement it may have been improved post-war. It would seem that the old carriage and considerable part of old mounting system was retained however.
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Wednesday 17th of November 2010 08:09:07 AM
I am very "surprised" when I read that french railroads guns of first world War had only "primitive system, etc..."! The photograph of the first Post shows the "Canon de 340 mm modèle 1912 sur affût à berceau Saint-Chamond". Four models of these modern Navy guns were made in Saint-Chamond Works in 1916.The first gun was in action on the Somme in july 1916. Two others guns on same mounts were made in 1918. In final attacks of 1918, 4 "340 mm modèle 1912" guns were used by french artillery and 2 others were used by american troops of AEF. In 1918, the french Army had more that 400 railroad guns.They were 350 guns in "primitive mounts" but the others were in modern mounts. The british Army asked in many times in 1916-1918 the cooperation of french long range guns because the british Army had not very much long range guns at the time.I have many letters of british senior Officers who thank french Railroad Artillery Officers for the use of their guns, especially for firing on long range german guns in british sector of the front. Please see my book "Les Canons de la Victoire-tome 2-L'artillerie lourde à grande puissance" who depicts 59 models of heavy french guns, mostly Railroad guns. Sorry for my poor english writing. Yours sincerely, Guy François.
To quote from the Landships article on the 305mm gun - "It was a pretty crude system, but it worked, and it allowed the French to field a whole array of heavy railway guns, that originally started out in a naval role."
If the term "primitive" offended, I apologise - it was only used to emphasise that the recoil system was less advanced than that which used hydraulic recoil cylinders.
Yes, most french Railroads guns were in "primitive" mounts but they were also many "modern" mounts with hydro-pneumatic and hydraulic recoil cylinders and brakes built during the first World War:
-the 6 guns "340 mm modèle 1912 " sur affût Saint-Chamond. -the 12 howitzers "400 mm modèle 1915" Saint-Chamond. -the 8 howitzers "370 mm modèle 1915" Batignolles and Schneider. -the 6 mortars "293 mm Danois" Schneider (mortars commanded by Danemark and requisitionned in 1914 at Schneider Works). -the 16 guns "240 mm modèle 1903 TR" Schneider (coast guns mounted in railway mounts). -some medium guns in Railway mount. Yours sincerely, Guy François.
-- Edited by ALVF on Wednesday 17th of November 2010 10:08:27 AM
I did not look far enough into that American book! PDA, you will find a huge amount about this gun, including photos and detail drawings, in Section 169 (page 91) and following - 10 pages in all - in the link I gave.
The Americans rated it most highly - "A number of these mounts were operated by American personnel, and they were considered among the most valuable guns and mounts in the French collection." and "... probably the finest large gun in the possession of the French Army during the war."
So, a genuine WW1 model of a most significant major weapon.
Well then, we have indeed overlooked this model kit since it was released.
The kit is made by Wespe Models of Romania, in two scales: 1/72 and 1/87. Wespe make some other kits that will be of interest to WW1 modelers, but I believe this is the only WW1 kit in 1/72, the others are 1/87.
PDA wrote:Well then, we have indeed overlooked this model kit since it was released.
The kit is made by Wespe Models of Romania, in two scales: 1/72 and 1/87. Wespe make some other kits that will be of interest to WW1 modelers, but I believe this is the only WW1 kit in 1/72, the others are 1/87.
PDA wrote:Well then, we have indeed overlooked this model kit since it was released.
The kit is made by Wespe Models of Romania, in two scales: 1/72 and 1/87. Wespe make some other kits that will be of interest to WW1 modelers, but I believe this is the only WW1 kit in 1/72, the others are 1/87.
Hmmm ... they currently list it for 1/72 only in their "Promotions of the Month", not in the online catalogue. Seems like it might be on the way out of their 1/72 range. Pity, marvellous piece of artillery, a naval conversion from the days when naval arms had just recently (and more or less incidentally) embraced "over the horizon" capability, hitherto shunned.
But they also have a 1/72 "Horse Drawn Convoy". Is that of interest in WW1 modelling?
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Friday 19th of November 2010 04:30:58 AM
Wespe do some other WW1 stuff, but in 1/87 scale (so they would fit in with that one-and-only model of the 'Burstyn tank'). This gun, for example, is also done in 1/87, along with some Renault FTs, and the famous 75, I believe.
Whilst 1/87 would not fit with anything from Copplestone, or Zvezda's Germans (or indeed anything from Zvezda), they might fit with some of the Airfix, or Peter Pig figures, and certainly with a lot of Preiser's stuff.
Reading the US Army Railway Gun report it seems as if this gun was designed to be installed on a wooden purpose built mounting - perhaps it should be classified as a "railway deliverable gun" rather than a gun which could be fired from a railway mounting.
Regards,
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Saturday 20th of November 2010 07:10:21 AM
Good point Charlie, but really, it seems to me, all of them involved some degree of "civil engineering" work to set up (often including tracklaying), the more so the larger they were. With maybe a 200 ton gun firing something like half ton or even larger projectiles at around 2,600 fps it was always going to take more than a couple of swing-out spades to set the things up. Maybe the nomenclature should reflect the difference between these and the more-or-less self-contained, quick/instantly into action smaller types.
Steve
P.S. The 1/87 comes in both "transport" and "firing position" versions which nicely illustrates your point:
-- Edited by Rectalgia on Saturday 20th of November 2010 05:31:56 PM