The largest gun ever built was the "Gustav Gun"
built in Essen, Germany in 1941 by the firm of
Friedrich Krupp A.G. Upholding a tradition of naming heavy cannon after family
members, the Gustav Gun was named after the invalid head of the Krupp family -
Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach. The strategic weapon of its day, the
Gustav Gun was built at the direct order of Adolf Hitler for the express
purpose of crushing Maginot Line forts protecting the French frontier. To
accomplish this, Krupp designed a giant railway gun weighing 1344 tons with a
bore diameter of 800 mm (31.5") and served by a 500 man crew commanded by
a major-general.
Two types of projectiles were fired using a 3000lb. charge of smokeless powder:
a 10,584 lb. high explosive (HE) shell and a 16,540 lb. concrete-piercing
projectile. Craters from the HE shells measured 30-ft. wide and 30-ft. deep
while the concrete piercing projectile proved capable of penetrating 264-ft. of
reinforced concrete before exploding! Maximum range was 23 miles with HE shells
and 29 miles with concrete piercing projectiles. Muzzle velocity was
approximately 2700 f.p.s.
Three guns were ordered in 1939. Alfried Krupp personally hosted Hitler and
Albert Speer (Minister of Armaments) at the Hugenwald Proving Ground during
formal acceptance trials of the Gustav Gun in the spring of 1941. In keeping
with company tradition, Krupp refrained from charging for the first gun - 7
million Deutsch Marks were charged for the second (named Dora after the chief
engineer's wife).
France
fell in 1940 without the assistance of the Gustav Gun, so new targets were
sought. Plans to use Gustav against the British fortress of Gibraltar
were scrapped after General Franco refused permission to fire the gun from
Spanish soil. Thus, April 1942 found the Gustav Gun emplaced outside the
heavily fortified port city of Sebastopol in the
Soviet Union. Under fire from Gustav and other
heavy artillery, Forts Stalin, Lenin and Maxim Gorki crumbled and fell. One
round from Gustav destroyed a Russion ammunition dump 100 feet below Severnaya Bay; a near miss capsized a large ship
in the harbor. Gustav fired 300 rounds during the siege wearing out the
original barrel in the process. Dora was set up west of Stalingrad
in mid-August but hurriedly withdrawn in September to avoid capture. Gustav
next appeared outside Warsaw,
Poland, where
it fired 30 rounds into Warsaw Ghetto during the 1944 uprising.
Dora was blown up by German engineers in April 1945 near Oberlichtnau, Germany,
to avoid capture by the Russian Army. The incomplete third gun was scrapped at
the factory by the British Army when they captured Essen. Gustav was captured intact by the U.S.
Army near Metzendorf, Germany, in June 1945. Shortly
after, it was cut up for scrap thus ending the story of the Gustav Gun.
Source : http://www.worldsbiggests.com
No comments:
Post a Comment