38 cm SK L/45 "Max" | |
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"Max" on its E.u.B. mounting |
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Type | Naval gun Railroad gun |
Place of origin | German Empire |
Service history | |
In service | 1918 |
Used by | German Empire |
Wars | World War I |
Production history | |
Designer | Krupp |
Designed | 1912–14 |
Manufacturer | Krupp |
Produced | 1914–18 |
Number built | 8 |
Specifications | |
Weight | 267.9 tonnes (263.7 long tons; 295.3 short tons) |
Length | 31.61 metres (103 ft 8 in) |
Barrel length | 16.13 metres (52 ft 11 in) L/42 |
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Shell | separate-loading, case charge |
Caliber | 38 centimetres (15 in) |
Breech | horizontal sliding-block |
Recoil | hydro-pneumatic |
Carriage | 2 x 5-axle and 2 x 4-axle bogies |
Elevation | +0° to +18.5° (+55° if emplaced) |
Traverse | 2° (up to 360° if emplaced) |
Muzzle velocity | 800 to 1,040 m/s (2,600 to 3,400 ft/s) |
Effective range | 22,200 metres (24,300 yd) (from rails) |
Maximum range | 47,500 metres (51,900 yd) (if emplaced) |
The 38 cm SK L/45 "Max" (SK - Schnelladekanone (quick-loading cannon) L - Länge (with a 45 caliber barrel)), also called Langer Max (literal translation "Long Max") was a German railroad gun used during World War I. Originally a naval gun, it was adapted for land service when it became clear that the ships for which it was intended would be delayed and that it would be very useful as long-range, heavy siege and coast-defense gun on the Western Front. The first guns saw service in fixed positions, but the lengthy preparation time required for the concrete emplacements was a severe drawback and a railroad mount was designed to increase the gun's mobility. It participated in the 1918 Spring Offensives and the Second Battle of the Marne. One gun was captured in Koekelare (16 October 1918) by the Belgians at the end of the war and the seven surviving cannons were destroyed in 1921 and 1922.
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They were originally designed as the main armament of the Bayern-class battleships, but were deployed in fixed (Anschiessgerüst) and semi-portable (Bettungsgerüst) concrete emplacements that took weeks to months to build.[1] One obvious change made for land service was the placement of a large folding counterweight just forward of the trunnions to counteract the preponderance of weight towards the breech. This, although heavy, was simpler than adding equilibrators to perform the same function. It folded to lower the gun's height while travelling.[2]
To meet the demands for more mobility and a faster emplacement time Krupp designed a combination railroad and firing platform mounting (Eisenbahn und Bettungsgerüst - E. u. B.) at the end of 1917 using guns released by the suspension of SMS Sachsen and SMS Württemberg. This mount allowed the gun to fire both from any suitable section of track and from a fixed emplacement. The E. u. B. mount used a combination of cradle and rolling recoil systems to absorb the recoil forces when firing from rails.[3] It could traverse a total of 2° for fine aiming adjustments, coarser adjustments had to be made by moving the entire carriage. The gun had to be loaded at zero elevation and so had to be re-aimed for every shot. One major problem when firing from rails was that the lengthy recoil movement of the gun prevented elevation past 18° 30' lest the breech hit the ground when firing, which limited range to 22.2 kilometres (24,300 yd).[4] Nicknamed Max, the gun's (supporting) barrel and railway-transportable carriage was used in the famed Paris Gun. Some guns were also emplaced in the Pommern and Deutschland coastal defense batteries on the Flanders coast protecting occupied Ostend.
The first fixed emplacements (Betonbettung) used concrete and required a month or more to build. The Germans began construction of a number them during the winter of 1917—8 in preparation for their planned Spring Offensive. From May 1918 they used a removable steel box (Bettung mit Eisenunterbau) in lieu of the concrete that shortened the construction time, although the exact amount is unknown.[5] Miller quotes three weeks as the time necessary to build the steel version from captured German manuals. The emplacement consisted of a central rotating platform, the main approach track and two auxiliary tracks on each side for the gantry crane necessary to assemble the emplacement, and an outer circular track to handle the ammunition. The central platform had railroad track on one axis and the actual firing mount on the other. All that was necessary to emplace the E. u. B. mount was to center it on the platform, jack it up, remove the trucks, and rotate the platform 90° and lower the mount to be bolted to the platform.[6]
When used as a rolling mount an extension of the carriage was fitted over the rear trucks to allow the ammunition car behind the mount to place ammunition on the shot truck which is then manually run up to the breech for loading. In an emplacement this extension is removed and ammunition is hoisted up through a hatch on the floor of the mount, between the shot truck rails, from an ammunition car on the outer track and then lowered onto the shot truck. An estimated twelve men were required to ram the shell.[7] It used the German naval system of ammunition where the base charge was held in a metallic cartridge case and supplemented by another charge in a silk bag which was rammed first. The existence of a shell with 55 kilometres (60,000 yd) range must be regarded as unconfirmed, the longest engagement recorded for any of these guns was 44 kilometres (48,000 yd) during the bombardment of Dunkerque by Batterie Pommern in Flanders in 1917—8.[8]
Shell name | Weight | Filling Weight | Muzzle velocity | Range |
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base-fused high-explosive shell (Sprenggranate L/4.1 m. Bdz.) | 750 kg (1,700 lb) | 67 kg (150 lb) (HE) | 800 m/s (2,600 ft/s) | 34,200 m (37,400 yd) |
base-fused HE shell with ballistic cap (Sprenggranate L/5.4 m. Bdz. (mit Haube)) | 743 kg (1,640 lb) | 62 kg (140 lb) (HE) | 800–890 m/s (2,600–2,900 ft/s) | 38,700 m (42,300 yd) |
Shrapnel shell (Stschr L/3.4) | 750 kg (1,700 lb) | 6.7 kg (15 lb) (HE) | unknown | 22,600 m (24,700 yd) |
light base- and nose-fused HE shell with ballistic cap (leichte Sprgr m. Bdz. u. Kz. (mit Haube)) | 400 kg (880 lb) | 31 kg (68 lb) (HE) | 1,040 m/s (3,400 ft/s) | 47,500 m (51,900 yd) |
HE shell with ballistic cap (Sprenggranate L/4.4 (mit Haube)) | unknown | unknown | unknown | 55,000 m (60,000 yd) |
They were used as heavy siege guns on the Western Front, and the first salvo from two of these guns commenced the first massive German artillery bombardment during the Battle of Verdun.
Only one gun was transferred to the Army where it equipped Saxon Battery (Sächsische Batterie) 1015. This unit fired 141 shots from Bézu-Saint-Germain beginning on 15 July 1918.[8] The Navy retained the rest of the guns and operated them in support of the Army. Three "Max" guns participated in the 1918 Spring Offensives and two bombarded the French during the Second Battle of the Marne.[9] One gun was found abandoned in a railway station west of Brussels in November 1918 by the Belgian Army, but the seven others had been evacuated to Germany before the Armistice where they were to be emplaced on coast-defense duties. All seven were destroyed by the Military Inter-Allied Commission of Control during 1921–22.[10] The Belgians sold their gun to the French in 1924 for experimental purposes. It was captured by the Germans after the French surrender in 1940, but does not appear to have been used by them.[11]
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