THE NEW ARMSTRONG GUN.
[From the ‘European Mail.’] Extraordinary progress has been made of late years in practical artillery by the construction of guns, both muzzle and breech-loaders, capable of producing effects equal to those attained by pieces of ordnance double the weight of the new ones. The new Armstrong 6-inch gun, weighing only four tons, is at once the most handy and formidable weapon ever manufactured in this or any other country. Experiments have proved that it will throw a shell of 801bs. weight with a force sufficient to pierce by far the largest number of ironclads now afloat. The hole made in a plate 10 inches thick was 6.04 inches in diameter, and the shell was hardly at all altered in shape. Nothing could be more satisfactory as to the quality of the metal; and another fact of great importan -e was that the gas check remained firmly attached to the shell. If we carry back our thoughts a few years and remember that the heaviest gun in the service, the 68-pounder of 5 tons 12 cwt., could make no impression on the 4.5 inch plates of the early ironclads, and that in 1866 the Austrian ships carried ordnance which were totally ineffective against the Italian vessels, the sides of which were pitted with the marks of shot fired at close range, we shall see how extraordinary has been the development of the art of destruction. The most interesting comparison that could be made with ordnance that were actually supported by artillerists in America, and even by smne in our own country as late as 1867, would be that of the 15-inch American smooth bore with the new 6-inch ArmstrongThe American gun weighed 19J tons, nearly five tons as much as the 6-inch. Its charge was 601 b, or, as an extreme case, 1001 b. With 601 b the shot (for no round shells could be used against plates) was utterly foiled by the 8-inch target, and with 1001 b it succeeded in penetrating it. The little 6-inch of less than 4 tons would pierce that target with ease, as the 9-inch service gun did.
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Temuka Leader, Volume I, Issue 107, 25 December 1878, Page 2
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357THE NEW ARMSTRONG GUN. Temuka Leader, Volume I, Issue 107, 25 December 1878, Page 2
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