QF 2 pounder naval gun

QF 2 pdr Mark VIII ("pom-pom")

The quadruple 2 pdr mounting (Mk.VII) of HMS Kelvin
Type Autocannon
Place of origin  United Kingdom
Service history
In service 1915–1940s (Mk II)
1930–1940s (Mk VIII)
Used by  British Empire
 Japan
 Russia
 Italy
Wars World War I
World War II
Production history
Designer Vickers Armstrongs
Designed 1915 (Mk II)
1923 (Mk VIII)
Variants Low-velocity (LV) & high-velocity (HV),
RHI, LHI, RHO, LHO for multiple mountings,
Type 91 HI Shiki (Japanese)
Specifications (Mk.VIII HV)
Weight 850 lb (385.5 kg)
Length 8 ft 6 in (2.6 m)

Shell 40 × 158R
Calibre 40 mm (1.575 in)
Barrels 1, 4 or 8
Rate of fire 115 rpm
Muzzle velocity new gun: 732 m/s (2,400 ft/s)
worn gun: 701 m/s (2,300 ft/s)[1]
Effective range 3,960 m (13,300 ft) A/A ceiling
Maximum range 6,220 m (6,800 yards) at 701 m/s[2]
Feed system 14-round steel-link belt
Filling weight 71 g (2.5 oz)

The 2-pounder gun, officially designated the QF 2-pounder (QF denoting "quick firing") and universally known as the pom-pom, was a 1.575 inch (40 mm) British autocannon, used famously as an anti-aircraft gun by the Royal Navy. The name came from the sound that the original models make when firing. Although these were 2-pounder guns, in that they fired a projectile with a weight of 2 pounds, they were not the same gun as that used by the British Army as an anti-tank weapon or to equip British tanks and certain armoured cars.

Contents

Predecessors - Boer War and the Great War

QF 1 pounder

The first gun to be called a pom-pom was the 37 mm Nordenfelt-Maxim or "QF 1-pounder" introduced during the Second Boer War, the smallest artillery piece of that war. It fired a shell one pound in weight accurately over a distance of 3,000 yards (2,740 m). The barrel was water-cooled, and the shells were belt-fed from a 25-round fabric belt. The Boers used them against the British, who, seeing their utility, had the design copied by Vickers, who were already producing Maxim guns.

In World War I it was used in the trenches of the Western Front against aircraft.

QF 1½ pounder

The first naval pom-pom was the QF 1.5-pdr Mark I, a piece with a calibre of 37 mm (1.46 in) and a barrel 43 calibres long. This was trialed in the Arethusa class light cruisers HMS Arethusa and HMS Undaunted, but did not enter full service, being replaced instead by a larger weapon, the QF 2-pdr Mark II (see below).

QF 2-pounder Mark II

The QF 2-pounder Mark II was essentially a scaled-up version of the QF 1 pounder Maxim gun produced by Vickers. It was a 40 mm calibre gun with a water-cooled barrel and a Vickers-Maxim mechanism. It was ordered in 1915 by the Royal Navy as an anti-aircraft weapon for ships of cruiser size and below. The original models fired from hand-loaded fabric belts, although these were later replaced by steel-link belts. This 'scaling-up' process was not entirely successful, as it left the mechanism rather light and prone to faults such as rounds falling out of the belts.

Surviving weapons were brought out of storage to see service in World War II, mainly on board second-rate ships such as naval trawlers, Motor Boats and "armed yachts". It was used almost exclusively in the single-barrel, unpowered pedestal mountings P Mark II (Royal Navy nomenclature gave mountings and guns their own distinct Mark numbers) except for a small number of weapons on the mounting Mark XV, which was a twin-barreled, powered mount. These were too heavy to be of any use at sea, and were therefore mounted ashore. All were scrapped by 1944.

Some 7,000 guns were made. The gun was also used by the Japanese as the 40 mm/62 "HI" Shiki.

QF 2-pounder Mark VIII

The Royal Navy had identified the need for a rapid-firing, multi-barrelled close-range anti-aircraft weapon at an early stage. Design work for such a weapon began in 1923 based on the earlier Mark II, undoubtedly to utilise the enormous stocks of 2-pounder ammunition left over from World War I. Lack of funding led to a convoluted and drawn-out design and trials history, and it was not until 1930 that these weapons began to enter service. Known as the QF 2-pounder Mark VIII, it is usually referred to as the multiple pom-pom. The initial mounting was the 11.8 to 17.35 ton,[4][5] eight-barrelled mounting Mark V (later Mark VI), suitable for ships of cruiser and aircraft carrier size upwards. From 1935 the quadruple mounting Mark VII, essentially half a Mark V or VI, entered service for ships of destroyer and cruiser size. These multiple gun mounts required four different guns and were nicknamed the "Chicago Piano".[3] The mount had 2 rows each of 2 or 4 weapons. Guns were produced in both right- and left-hand and "inner" and "outer" so that the feed and ejector mechanisms matched. Single-barrelled mounts, the Mark VIII (manual) and Mark XVI (power operated), were also widely used, mainly in small escorts (such as the 'Flower' Class corvettes) and coastal craft (especially early Fairmile 'D' motor gunboats). The Mark XVI mounting was related to the twin mounting Mark V for the Oerlikon 20 mm cannon and the "Boffin" mounting for the Bofors 40 mm gun. An interesting feature was the very large magazine, from 140 rounds per gun for the 8-barrelled mount, to 56 rounds for the single mounts.[6] This large ammunition capacity gave the 8-barrelled mount the ability to fire continuously for 73 seconds without reloading.

The pom-pom and the USN

The United States Navy also considered adopting the pom-pom gun prior to its entry into World War II, and conducted a series of trials between the USN 1.1" gun, the US Army 37mm Gun, the Vickers 40mm pom-pom, and the Bofors 40 mm:

"Among the machine guns under consideration were the Army's 37-mm and the British Navy's 2-pounder, more commonly known as the "pompom." The decision soon narrowed to a choice between the Bofors and the British gun. The British were anxious to have their gun adopted, and the fact that British aid would be readily available in initiating manufacture was put forward as an argument in favor of its selection. The 2-pounder, moreover was giving a good account of itself on British ships. On the other hand, there was the distinct disadvantage that the gun was designed for cordite powder, and no manufacturing facilities for the production of this ammunition were available in the United States. Thorough study revealed that the gun could not be converted to take American powder. Another consideration was muzzle velocity: The pompom had a relatively low velocity, 2350 feet per second as compared with 2830 for the Bofors. The success of the pompom in action was more than offset by the proved qualities of the Bofors in the hands of a number of powers who were using it, and the Bureau decided to join that group. Shortly after the Bureau's selection of the Bofors, British naval officials also decided to adopt the gun."[7]

Wartime use

An advanced weapon when introduced, by the outbreak of World War II advances in aircraft would have made it obsolete but for the introduction of a high-velocity round and new director designs. It was intended that the curtain of fire it threw up would be sufficient to deter attacking aircraft, which it did, but was hampered by the ineffective Mk III director.[8] The MK IV Director with a Gyro Rate Unit and Type 282 radar[9] was a great advance and was introduced on the KGV class battleships. In January 1941, HMS Illustrious's Mk VIII (HV) mountings performed flawlessly firing 30,000 rounds with very few stoppages.[8] When HMS Prince of Wales was attacked and sunk by Japanese aircraft near Singapore, the subsequent report judged that a single 40 mm Bofors gun firing tracer was a more effective anti-aircraft weapon[10][11] than a multiple pom-pom in director control, as the pom-poms did not have tracer ammunition and the pom-pom ammunition had deteriorated badly in their ready use lockers, while the Type 282 radar units also failed in the equatorial heat.[12][13] In the same action, the Commissioned Gunner of HMS Repulse spent the whole action running from one pom-pom mount to another trying to keep them operational due to the faulty ammunition. The pom-poms on Repulse shot down 2 of the four confirmed kills made by Force Z,[14] while Prince of Wales' pom-poms did record hits on enemy aircraft.[15] The Royal Navy judged the pom-pom's effectiveness to range from about half that of the Bofors, per gun, against torpedo planes to about equal against Kamikaze attackers.[16] It was a ubiquitous weapon that outnumbered the Bofors gun, in Commonwealth naval service,[17] up to the end of World War II and shot down many Axis aircraft. Later innovations such as Remote Power Control (RPC) coupled to a radar-equipped tachymetric (speed predicting) director increased the accuracy enormously and problems with the fuses and reliability were also remedied. The single mountings received a reprieve towards the end of the war as the 20 mm Oerlikon guns had insufficient stopping power to counter Japanese Kamikaze aircraft and there were insufficient numbers of Bofors guns to go round.

For more extensive technical data see 2-pdr Mark VIII at Navweaps.com

QF 2-pounder Mark XIV

The QF 2-pounder Mark XIV, or Rolls 2 pounder, was developed by Rolls-Royce as a competitor to the 40 mm "Vickers S" gun as an aircraft weapon. The latter was the more successful design, and found some use as an anti-tank weapon. A reworked version was adopted by the Royal Navy as a weapon for Motor Gun Boats, being adopted in the Fairmile C type. It had a semi-automatic horizontally sliding breech block, and was shipped on a manually trained pedestal mount. The weapon was not a success, and of the 1,200 ordered only some 600 were delivered. It was replaced by the Molins 6-pounder gun, the British Army's Ordnance QF 6 pounder gun (57 mm) with an auto-loader.

Ammunition

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Naval Weapons of WW2, Campbell, p71
  2. ^ Campbell, p.71
  3. ^ a b c d e I.V. Hogg & L.F. Thurston, British Artillery Weapons & Ammunition 1914-1918. London: Ian Allan, 1972, Page 28.
  4. ^ Raven and Roberts, British Cruisers of WW2, p224. The first 8 barrel mounting weighed 11.8 tons while a Remote Power Control mount along with 1.6 tons (1200 rounds) of ammunition weighed 17.35 tons.
  5. ^ Campbell, Naval Weapons of WW2, p67 and p149. Campbell notes that a quad USN Bofors mount weighed 11.12 to 11.88 tons and only carried a maximum of 10 rounds per gun on the mount.
  6. ^ Campbell, Naval Weapons of WW2, P72
  7. ^ Rowland and Boyd, U. S. NAVY BUREAU OF ORDNANCE IN WORLD WAR II, USN Bureau of Ordnance, p223-224.
  8. ^ a b Campbell, Naval Weapons of WW2, p20
  9. ^ The Gunnery Pocket book, p164
  10. ^ Middlebrook, Battleship, p340. The report does not note any 40mm Bofors kills or even hits from the Prince of Wales' Bofors gun, while hits from pom-pom fire were recorded by the crew of the Prince of Wales.
  11. ^ Middlebrook, Battleship, p340: "It is considered that a Bofors with tracer ammunition in local control is a more valuable weapon than an 8 barrelled pom-pom in director control without tracer..."
  12. ^ Brown, A radar history of World War II: technical and military imperatives, p220. Brown notes that 3 out of 4 type 282 radars were out of service when Prince of Wales departed Singapore.
  13. ^ Garzke and Dulin, Allied Battleships, p204, notes that the remaining type 282 and two type 285 radars failed after the first torpedo hit.
  14. ^ Middlebrook, Battleship, p224
  15. ^ Middlebrook, Battleship, p340
  16. ^ Campbell, Naval Weapons of WW2, P67: "...if control and mountings were of equal efficiency, the Bofors was reckoned to be twice as effective as the pom-pom against torpedo planes but not much better against very close range targets such as Kamikazes."
  17. ^ Campbell, p.67 + 74.
  18. ^ Campbell,Naval Weapons of WW2, p71

Bibliography

External links