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Dragoon 45 -> RE: What are the caliburs of British guns? (4/28/2006 9:27:12 AM)
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2 Pdr is a 40mm, 6 pdr is 57mm, 17 pdr is 3" or 76.2mm, 18 pdr field gun was also a 3" gun. I believe the 25 pdr is 94mm but not sure. The Brit system for naming guns is quite confusing sometimes. Some of their guns were named after the weight of the shell and some like the 5.5" gun named after the bore size. Also the OQF designation stands for Ordinance Quick Firing. There was also a 3 pdr used in some of the pre-WW II tanks that I believe was a 47mm, but do not quote me on that. They also had different marks of the same gun which sometimes referred to improved guns (i.e. increased barrel length or improved shells) or to improved carriages. While I am sure there is one out there someplace I have never seen a chart that gave the bore size, shell weight, and barrel length for all the British guns. The US 37mm AT and tank guns were copies of the German PAK-36 3.7cm AT Gun, of which samples were bought and then copied prior to the war. The British 6 pdr (British design) and US 57mm AT Guns are essentially the same gun with only some minor differences in the carriage and wheels. The 17 pdr was a distinctly British gun based on a 3" AAA gun of pre-war design. The US Army in 1944 inquired about purchasing some of them to arm US Tanks with but at the time British production was only capable of meeting British Army demand for the weapon. quote:
ORIGINAL: Jh316 Them being listed in pounds makes it harder to quickly compare them with those of other countries.
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