QF 4 Inch Mk XVI Naval Gun
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The QF 4 inch Mk XVI gunMk XVI = Mark 16. Britain used
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to denote marks (models) of ordnance until after World War II. Mark XVI indicates this was the sixteenth model of QF 4 inch gun.
was the standard
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naval anti-aircraft and dual-purpose gun of
World War II World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
.


Service

The Mk XVI superseded the earlier QF 4 inch Mk V naval gun on many Royal Navy ships during the late 1930s and early 1940s. The ammunition fired by the Mk V gun and the Mk XVI guns were different. The ammunition for the Mk V gun was long and weighed , while the ammunition fired by the Mk XVI gun was long and weighed . The weight of the high-explosive projectile grew from for the Mk V to for the Mk XVI. There were three variants of the gun produced with differing construction methods. The original Mk XVI had an A tube, jacket to from the muzzle and a removable breech ring. The Mk XVI* replaced the A tube with an autofretted loose barrel with a sealing collar at the front of the jacket. The Mk XXI was a lighter version with an autofretted monobloc barrel and a removable breech ring. The total number of Mk XVI and XVI* guns produced was 2,555, while there were 238 Mk XXI guns produced. Of those totals ,604 Mk XVI* and 135 of the Mk XXI guns were produced in Canada and 45 of the Mk XVI* were produced in Australia. These guns were usually mounted on HA/LA Mark XIX twin mountings, although several Australian frigates and corvettes had single-gun Mk XX mountings.Campbell, ''Naval Weapons of WWII'', p.56. The last Royal Navy ship to operate with a Mark XIX twin mounting was , which had originally been designed for the
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and so required a simple and inexpensive main armament. Acquired by the British Government in 1972, she served until 1977 when she was purchased by the
Royal Malaysian Navy The Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN, ; Jawi alphabet, Jawi: ) is the naval arm of the Malaysian Armed Forces. RMN is the main agency responsible for the country's maritime surveillance and defence operations. RMN's area of operation consists of 603,2 ...
and renamed KD ''Hang Tuah''.


List of equipped vessels


As secondary armament

(list not complete) * Aircraft carriers: , * Escort carriers: s, HMS ''Pretoria Castle'', HMS ''Activity'' * * s (converted to anti-aircraft cruisers) * , , * s * s * * s * s * s * s * s * s * s * * *


As main armament

(list not complete) * s * s * (the first series L: HMS ''Gurkha'', ''Lance'', ''Legion'', ''Lively'') * (modified) * s * s (after WAIR modification – 15 ships) * (after WAIR modification) * s * Some s (single-gun Mk XX mounting) * s * s * (modified) * (modified) * s * s (part of Canadian-built) * 8 auxiliary AA defence ships * Some landing ships


Allied ships fitted out in Britain

* (Polish) * (Dutch) * (Dutch) * 4 French ''Elan''-class avisos and s


Post-war construction ships

* Type 15 frigates (converted) * Type 16 frigates (converted) * SAS ''Jan van Riebeeck'' and ''Simon van der Stel'' converted frigates (South Africa) * NNS ''Nigeria'' frigate (Nigerian) * Vosper Mk 3 corvettes (NNS ''Dorina'' and ''Otobo'') (Nigerian) The South African Navy s ( HMSAS ''Good Hope'' and HMSAS ''Transvaal'') each had two of these guns mounted on a twin Mark XIX mount on their foredeck between 1955 and 1976.


Ammunition

HMAS Swan guns (079323).jpg, Twin guns of bombarding shore positions in New Guinea, February 1945 HMAS Barcoo QF 4 inch Mk XVI single mount breech AWM 119466.jpg, Single Mk XX mounting on , 1945 The Royal Navy during the Second World War HMS Glasgow 4-inch AA gun crew A 21143.jpg, Gunners of clearing empty cartridges after a shoot Gunners with 4 inch rounds HMS Vivien 1940 IWM A 1770.jpg, HMS Belfast - 4 inch guns - shell loading 1.jpg,


See also

* QF 4 inch Mk V naval gun : Royal Navy anti-aircraft predecessor * List of naval anti-aircraft guns * List of naval guns


Surviving examples

* Front Lawn of HMCS York, Toronto, Ontario, Canada * On , Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. * A pair in turret from HMCS Huron (G24) at the Royal Military College, Kingston, Ontario, Canada * Naval Museum of Alberta, Canada * HMCS Unicorn, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. * Trenton Park, Trenton, Nova Scotia, Canada * On , London, which retains four twin guns. * Explosion! Museum of Naval Firepower, Gosport, Hampshire, UK * On , Gdynia (re-bored to 100 mm). * A pair at South African National Museum of Military History, Johannesburg * A pair in a turret from INS ''Haifa'' (K-38), at Clandestine Immigration and Naval Museum, Haifa, Israel. * Two single guns on , Brisbane, Australia * One twin gun at th
Marinemuseet
Horten, Norway. * One twin gun in the Aldhurst military vehicles collection, Surrey England. Further research has proven the left gun was installed on the heavy cruiser HMS ''Devonshire'' from 1943 until she was scrapped in 1954.


Notes


References


Bibliography

* *


External links


B.R. 257. Handbook for the 4 inch Q.F. Mark XVI* Gun on the H.A. Twin Mark XIX And Single Mark XX Mountings. G3821/41
Naval Ordnance Department, Admiralty, July 1941. * Tony DiGiulian


Youtube video clip of demonstration of loading and firing on HMS Belfast

Youtube video clip of demonstration of loading and firing on HMS ''Belfast'' : closeup
Note : for safety reasons, cartridges are seen being loaded without the normal attached shell. {{DEFAULTSORT:QF 04-inch Mk 16 Naval anti-aircraft guns World War II anti-aircraft guns Naval guns of the United Kingdom 100 mm artillery World War II naval weapons of the United Kingdom Military equipment introduced in the 1930s