|
Construction was loose-barrel with a vertical sliding breech-block. |
8.8 cm/76 Twin Mount on Nürnberg |
| Designation | 8.8 cm/76 (3.46") SK C/32 |
| Ship Class Used On | German: Königsberg, Leipzieg,
Nürnberg and "M" Classes
Spain: Navarra |
| Date Of Design | 1932 |
| Date In Service | 1934 |
| Gun Weight | 8,025 lbs. (3,640 kg) (including breech mechanism) |
| Gun Length oa | 263.4 in. (6.690 m) |
| Bore Length | 249.6 in (6.341 m) |
| Rifling Length | 226.2 in. (5.746 m) |
| Grooves | (28) 0.047 in deep x 0.252 in (1.2 mm x 6.4 mm) |
| Lands | 0.137 in (3.47 mm) |
| Twist | Increasing RH 1 in 60 to 1 in 35 |
| Chamber Volume | 224.0 in3 (3.67 dm3) |
| Rate Of Fire | 15 - 20 rounds per minute |
| Type | Fixed |
| Weight of Complete Round | HE - 33.4 lbs. (15.2 kg)
ILLUM - N/A |
| Projectile Types and Weights | HE - 19.8 lbs. (9.0 kg)
ILLUM - 20.7 lbs. (9.4 kg) |
| Bursting Charge | 6.8 lbs. (3.1 kg) |
| Projectile Length | 15.6 in (39.7 cm) |
| Propellant Charge | 6.46 lbs. (2.93 kg) RPC/38 (4.5/1.5)
Cartridge - 13.2 lbs. (6.0 kg) |
| Muzzle Velocity | HE - 3,117 fps (950 mps)
ILLUM - 2,133 fps (650 mps) |
| Working Pressure | 20.0 tons/in2 (3,150 kg/cm2) |
| Approximate Barrel Life | 3,200 rounds |
| Ammunition stowage per gun | 400 rounds |
| Notes: Outfit for light cruisers consisted of nose-fuzed HE with and without tracer and illumination rounds. | |
| Elevation | With 19.8 lbs. (9.0 kg) Shell |
| Range @ 45 degrees | 18,810 yards (17,200 m) |
| AA Ceiling @ 80 degrees | 40,680 feet (12,400 m) |
| Designation | Twin Mounts
Königsberg (3), Leipzieg (3), Nürnberg (3): Dop. L. C/32 "M" class (2): Dop. L. C/37 |
| Weight | Dop. L. C/32: 52,139 lbs.
(23,650 kg)
Dop. L. C/37: N/A |
| Elevation | -10 / +80 degrees |
| Elevation Rate | 10 degrees per second |
| Train
(see Note) |
360 degrees |
| Train Rate | 8-10 degrees per second |
| Gun recoil | N/A |
| Note: These mountings could make one complete revolution in either direction from the mid (fore and aft) position for a total of 720 degrees of train. Firing arc was about -150 / +150 degrees. | |
11 February 2007 - Benchmark
22 May 2012 - Updated to latest template