Friday, December 03, 2021

Bethlehem Steel, 1940, producing big guns for the Navy, 16" battleship gun


they were shrink fit in laminated sections. The main barrel was made in 2 sections the outer barrel and the machined shell section, the outer section was hung in a giant pit heated and the inner section was lowered in then cooled. This the section where the shell and powder was placed wore out and with the shrink fit it could be reheated and replaced and refurbished easily.

The whole barrel was made in sections the area from the breech up to cover the shell and explosive did not have any rifling. Interesting photo as it shows all the different laminations.





In 1954, all of the Battleship New Jersey's massive 16" guns were replaced. 

The nine guns had been used during World War II and the Korean War. 

The guns were relined and test fired in 1969.

 Three of the barrels were in storage for decades at the St. Julien's Creek Annex U.S. Naval support facility in Portsmouth, Virginia.

 To save these historic barrels from being scrapped, the Battleship New Jersey and the Mahan Collection Foundation transported them for permanent display in Camden and Basking Ridge, New Jersey, and the Philadelphia Navy Yard. 

Each barrel is 68 feet long and weighs 120 tons. The barrels were transported north by Norfolk Southern. To support the barrels' restoration or for more information about this project, visit www.battleshipnewjersey.org/40

7 comments:

  1. My first job out of the Navy was in Bldg. 110, "the Big Gun Shop" at Watervliet Arsenal. It's been there since 1813. I was a machinist doing everything from small mortars to 8" Navy guns. The 16" were relined instead of remaking an entire tube. I went on to Quality Control and then to a research facility, Benet Weapons Lab. I retired with 42 years service.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmSKPCIOMJs&t=484s

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNB4dEys2uo&t=38s

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  2. Maybe they could be used to make puffed rice cereal?

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    Replies
    1. i do not understand

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    2. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGpS6LHeBC0

      In 1913, an advertising man named Claude C. Hopkins was assigned to help create an ad campaign for the cereal. Hopkins toured the Quaker factories looking for ideas. When he realized that puffed rice was actually made by using puffing guns (flash pressurizing and heating the grain until it expands or explodes), he let the cereal's manufacturing process speak for itself.
      Quaker Puffed Rice's new slogan, "The grains that are shot from guns", was a huge success. Sales of the cereal "shot" through the roof.

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    3. thank you! That was before my time, I've never heard of that ad campaign before

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  3. Cool story and what a process to build a barrel that huge .

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