| Krupp K5 | |
|---|---|
K5 railway gun in France circa. 1945 |
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| Type | Railway Artillery |
| Place of origin | Nazi Germany |
| Service history | |
| Used by | Wehrmacht |
| Wars | World War II |
| Production history | |
| Manufacturer | Krupp |
| Number built | 25 |
| Specifications | |
| Weight | 218 t |
| Length | 30 m (98 ft) travel mode 32 m (105 ft) firing mode |
| Barrel length | 76.1 calibres; 21.539 m (70.66 ft) |
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| Shell | 255 kg (562 lbs) |
| Caliber | 283 mm (11.14 in) |
| Elevation | +50° |
| Traverse | 1° |
| Rate of fire | 15 rounds per hour |
| Muzzle velocity | 1,120 m/s (3,675 ft/s) |
| Maximum range | 61 km (38 mi) |
The Krupp K5 was a heavy railway gun used by Germany throughout World War II.
Contents |
Description
The Krupp K5 series all were consistent in mounting a 21.5 m long gun barrel in a box mounting. This mounting was then mounted on a pair of 12-wheel bogies designed to be operated on commercial and military rails built to German standards. This mounting did not permit full gun traverse, but instead the carriage had to be aligned on the rails first, with only minimal fine levelling capable once halted. Hence the gun could only fire at targets tangential to an existing railway track.
To track other targets needing greater traverse either a special railway track pointing at the target was laid, or for 360 degree traverse, a turntable with circular track was constructed with a central jack to raise the gun during traverse and to take some of the enormous weight.
The main barrel of the K5 is 283 mm in calibre, and is rifled with twelve 7 mm grooves. These were originally 10 mm deep, but were shallowed to rectify cracking problems.
History
The K5 was the result of a crash program launched in the 1930s to develop a force of railway guns to support the Wehrmacht by 1939. K5 development began in 1934 with first testing following in 1936 at the Firing Test Range Rügenwalde-Bad (German: Schießplatz Rügenwalde-Bad) in Farther Pomerania at the South coast of the Baltic Sea. Initial tests were done with a 150 mm barrel under the designation K5M.
Production led to eight guns being in service for the Invasion of France, although problems were encountered with barrel splitting and rectified with changes to the rifling. The guns were then reliable until the end of the war, under the designation K5 Tiefzug 7 mm. Three of them were installed on the English Channel coast to target British shipping in the Channel, and proved successful at this task.
Towards the end of the war, development was done to allow the K5 to fire rocket-assisted projectiles to increase range. Successful implementation was done for firing these from the K5Vz.
A final experiment was to bore out two of the weapons to 310 mm (12.2") smoothbore to allow firing of the Peenemünder Pfeilgeschosse arrow shells. The two modified weapons were designated K5 Glatt.
Several other proposals were made to modify or create new models of the K5 which never saw production. In particular, there were a number of plans for a model which could leave the railway by use of specially modified Tiger II tank chassis which would support the mounting box in much the same manner as the railway weapon's two bogies. This project was finally ended by the capitulation of Germany.
Surviving Guns
A K5(E) is preserved at the United States Army Ordnance Museum in Maryland. It is composed of parts from two guns that shelled Anzio beachhead during World War II. They were named Robert and Leopold by ther Germans, but are better known by their Allied nicknames - Anzio Annie and Anzio Express.
The guns were discovered on a railroad siding in the town of Civitavecchia, on 7 June 1944, shortly after the allies occupied Rome.[1] Robert had been partially destroyed by the gun crew before they surrendered and Leopold was also damaged but not as badly. Both guns were shipped to the U.S. Aberdeen Proving Ground, (Aberdeen, Maryland) where they underwent tests. One complete K5 was made from the two damaged ones, and Leopold remains on display to this day.
A second surviving gun can be seen at the Battery Todt museum, near Audinghen in northern France.[2]
Notes and References
- Notes
- References
- Engelmann, Joachim (1976). Armor in Action - German Railroad Guns. Squadron/Signal Publications. ISBN 0-89747-048-6.
- Ulrich Ziervogel: Der Schießplatz in Rügenwalde-Bad, in: Der Kreis Schlawe - Ein pommersches Heimatbuch (M. Vollack, ed.), Vol. I: Der Kreis als Ganzes, Husum 1986, ISBN 3-88042-239-7, pp. 284-296.
External links
See also
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