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Pom-Pom (Gun)
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A '''pom-pom''' is a large calibre machine-gun, used mostly famously as an
Anti-aircraft warfare anti-aircraft gun by the
Britain British Royal Navy. The name came from the sound that the original models were reported to make when firing. Although these were 2-pounder guns they were not the same
2-pounder gun as that used by the
British Army as an anti-tank weapon.
Boer War and the Great War
The first gun to be called a pom-pom was the 37 mm
Maxim Gun Nordenfelt-Maxim introduced during the
Second Boer War, the smallest artillery piece of that war. It fired a shell one pound in weight accurately over a distance of 3,000 yards. The barrel was water cooled and the shells were belt-fed from a 25 round fabric belt. The
Boers used them against the British, who, seeing their utility, had the design copied by
Vickers, who were already producing Maxim guns, and used them as well.
In
World War I it was used against aircraft in the trenches of the Western Front. It was common at this time to refer to small weapons by the weight of the projectile rather than the bore of the barrel, e.g a 3-pounder gun had a calibre of 47 mm, a 6-pounder was 57 mm etc.
2-pounder Gun Mark II
The 2-pounder Mk. II was essentially a scaled-up version of the 1-pounder Maxim gun produced by
Vickers. It was a 40 mm calibre gun with a water-cooled barrel and a Vickers-Maxim mechanism. It was ordered in 1915 by the
Royal Navy as an anti-aircraft weapon for ships of cruiser size and below. The original models fired from hand-loaded fabric belts, although these were later replaced by steel-link belts. This 'scaling-up' process was not entirely successful, as it left the mechanism rather light and prone to faults such as rounds falling out of the belts.
Surviving weapons were brought out of storage to see service in
World War Two, mainly on board second-rate ships such as Trawlers, Motor Boats and armed Yachts. It was used almost exclusively in the single barrel, unpowered mounting Mark II - mountings, confusingly, received their own Mark numbers distinct from the gun - except for a small number of weapons on the mounting Mark XV which was a twin-barreled, powered mount. These were overweight and cumbersome and too heavy to be of any use at sea and were therefore mounted ashore. All were scrapped by 1944.
* Calibre: 40 mm L/39
* Shell Weight: 2 lb. (980 g)
* Rate of Fire: 200 rpm
* Effective Range: 1,200 yards (1,000 m)
* Muzzle Velocity: 1,920 feet/second (585 m/s)
Some 7,000 guns were made. The gun was also used by the
Japanese as the 40 mm/62 "HI" Shiki.
For more extensive technical data see [http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNBR_2pounder_m2.htm 2-pdr Mark II at Navweaps.com]
2-pounder Gun Mark VIII
Image:Pom pom on HMS Kelvin.JPG HMS Kelvin.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|right|225px|The quadruple 2pdr. mounting Mk.VII of [[HMS Kelvin seen in action during the Mediterranean campaign..html" title="Meaning of right|225px|The quadruple 2pdr. mounting Mk.VII of [[HMS Kelvin">thumb|right|225px|The quadruple 2pdr. mounting Mk.VII of [[HMS Kelvin seen in action during the Mediterranean campaign.">right|225px|The quadruple 2pdr. mounting Mk.VII of [[HMS Kelvin">thumb|right|225px|The quadruple 2pdr. mounting Mk.VII of [[HMS Kelvin seen in action during the Mediterranean campaign.
The
Royal Navy had identified the need for a rapid-firing, multi-barelled close-range anti-aircraft weapon at an early stage. Design work for such a weapon began in 1923 based on the earlier Mark II, undoubtedly to utilise the enormous stocks of 2-pounder ammunition left over from World War I. Lack of funding led to a convoluted and drawn-out design and trials history, and it was not until 1930 that these weapons began to enter service. Known as the gun Mark VIII, it is usually referred to as the ''multiple pom-pom''. The initial mounting was the enormous, 16-ton, eight-barelled mounting Mark V (later Mark VI), suitable for ships of
heavy cruiser and
aircraft carrier size upwards. From 1935 the quadruple mounting Mark VII, essentially half a Mark V or VI, entered service for ships of
destroyer and
cruiser size. These multiple gun mounts required four different guns. The mount had 2 rows each of 2 or 4 weapons. Guns were produced in both right and left hand and "inner" and "outer" so that the feed and ejector mechanisms matched. Single barelled mounts, the Mark VIII (manual) and Mark XVI (power operated) were also widely used, mainly in small escorts and coastal craft.
An advanced weapon when introduced, by the outbreak of World War II advances in aircraft had effectively made it obsolete. It was intended that the curtain of fire it threw up would be sufficient to deter attacking aircraft but lack of a suitable tracer round meant that the barrage was unseen and so the deterence factor was prevented from being effective. It had a low velocity due to the relatively short barrel and small charge, the fuse mechanism was unsatisfactory, the weapons were extremely complex and prone to jamming, and the mountings were enormously heavy and complicated and could not be produced quickly enough or fitted widely enough. When
HMS Prince of Wales (1939) HMS ''Prince of Wales'' was attacked and sunk by
Japan Japanese aircraft near Singapore the subsequent report judged that the single
Bofors 40 mm gun 40 mm Bofors gun, mounted on the quarterdeck, had been a more effective anti-aircraft weapon than the entire battery of multiple pom-pom mounts. Nevertheless, it was a ubiquitous weapon that was never entirely displaced by the Bofors gun during World War II. Later innovations such as remote power control (RPC) coupled to an effective radar-equipped tachymetric (speed predicting) director increased the accuracy enormously, and problems with the fuses and reliability were also addressed. The single mountings received a reprieve towards the end of the war, as the 20 mm Oerlikon guns had insufficient stopping power to counter Japanese
Kamikaze aircraft and there were insufficient numbers of Bofors guns to go round.
* Calibre: 40 mm L/39
* Shell Weight: 2 lb. (980 g) or 1.8 lb. (820 g) for High-Velocity ('''HV''') round
* Rate of Fire: 115 rpm fully automatic
* Effective Range: 3,800 yards (3,475 m) or 5,000 yards (4,572 m) HV
* Effective Celing (HV): 13,300 feet (3,960 m)
* Muzzle Velocity: 1,920 feet/s (585 m/s) or 2,300 feet/s (701 m/s) for HV
For more extensive technical data see [http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNBR_2pounder_m8.htm 2-pdr Mark VIII at Navweaps.com]
Category:Anti-aircraft weapons
Category:World War II British guns
Category:World War II anti-aircraft guns
Category:Naval artillery
Category:World War I British guns
Category:World War I anti-aircraft guns
Category:Victorian Age weapons of Great Britain
Category:World War I weapons of the United Kingdom
Category:40 mm artillery
see
Pom-Pom (gun)
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