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07-21-2015 12:36 PM
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The navy has many 16" gun tubes and barrels left from those not used in the building of cancelled battleships in WWII. Back in 2011 there were 15 each 16" gun barrels up for surplus sale. They had to be demiled per navy spec on site. They were Mark 7s....
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Originally Posted by
Tom in N.J.
16" gun barrels up for surplus sale.
Am I reading the barrel label correctly? It seems to indicate the barrel weighs 237, 175 lbs -- no wonder they were called "heavy guns."
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Originally Posted by
Seaspriter
Am I reading the barrel label correctly?
Yep, you sure are. And that's sans the breech. With the breech it weighed about 268,000lbs.
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Originally Posted by
vintage hunter
With the breech it weighed about 268,000lbs.
So, for 3 of them per turret, that's over 3/4 million pounds, plus the mounting platforms and magazine feed system, plus heavily armoured turrets -- over 1 million pounds per 3-barreled turret. And she had three 3-barreled turrets. Plus twenty 5inch 38s, and multiple batteries of Anti-Aircraft guns. It's just hard to fathom the fire-power amassed in such a small space. Was there any weaponry as powerful in such a concentrated location? ( A nuclear submarine with nuclear warheads is the only thing that comes to mind.)
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Originally Posted by
Seaspriter
Was there any weaponry as powerful in such a concentrated location?
A B-52 armed with a nuke. The Iowa's had nuclear capabilities also from the 50's on in the form of a 1900lb Mk.23 nuclear shell was loaded with a 20 kiloton warhead.
Last edited by vintage hunter; 07-22-2015 at 11:56 PM.
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Originally Posted by
Tom in N.J.
The navy has many 16" gun tubes and barrels left from those not used in the building of cancelled battleships in WWII. Back in 2011 there were 15 each 16" gun barrels up for surplus sale. They had to be demiled per navy spec on site. They were Mark 7s....
Attachment 64235Attachment 64236
Not exactly road transportable "as is" were they?
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"Not exactly road transportable "as is" were they?"
Don't think I'll try lugging one of those to the range. It would take a lifetime's supply of powder to get off just one shot...
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Originally Posted by
Seaspriter
237, 175 lbs
That's three Tractor Trailers PER barrel loaded to their absolute maximum legal road weight. Not cheap to move after you bought it!!!
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(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)
What a great memorial. We've got the BB-64 Wisconsin here in my area and she's in great shape. Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, VA, still has its 350-ton hammerhead crane that was installed in 1940 specifically to install and remove battleship turret assemblies as a unit. Get a peek at this:

Obviously it towers over the waterfront and has become a symbol of the area. The problem is that the ground beneath the crane isn't as stable as it once was. The Navy has discussed removing it but taking it down would carry with it a tremendous cost so they are trying to figure out next moves.
That's DDG-3, John King, a Charles F. Addams-class guided missile destroyer tied up in front of the crane. She was decommissioned in 1990 so that would give you a time frame for the picture.
For scale, look at the door and stairs on the butt end of the counter weight. The size of this thing is hard to judge until you are right underneath.
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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