Engineering:Vickers S

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Short description: 40 mm ground attack aircraft cannon
Vickers 40 mm Class S
Pilot 6 Sqn RAF with Hurricane IID at Shandur c1942.jpg
1942. A Hawker Hurricane fitted with two Vickers S, at Shandur, Egypt.
Service history
In service1942-
Used byRoyal Air Force
WarsSecond World War
Production history
Produced1942
VariantsMk 1, Mk 2
Specifications
Mass320 lb (134 kg)
Length9 ft 9 inches (2.97 m)
Barrel length5 ft 7 in (1.7 m)

Cartridge weight4 lb (1.8 kg) 40x158R
Calibre40 mm (1.6 in)
Rate of fire100 rounds/min
Muzzle velocity1,870 ft/s (569.98 m/s)
with 3 lb (1.4 kg) shot
Feed system12-round drum
later 15 rounds

The Vickers 40 mm Class S,[lower-alpha 1] often shortened to "S" gun,[2] was a 40 mm (1.57 in) airborne cannon designed by Vickers-Armstrongs for use as aircraft armament. It was primarily used during World War II by British aircraft to attack ground targets.[3] It was largely replaced by the RP-3 rocket from 1943 on.

History

The Vickers 40 mm Class S gun was developed in the late 1930s as an aircraft weapon. The ammunition was based on the 40x158R cartridge case of the naval 2 pdr Anti-aircraft gun (the "Pom-pom"). The weapon was a long-recoil design derived from the 37 mm (1½ pdr) gun from Coventry Ordnance Works (COW).

The gun was originally intended as a bomber defensive weapon and was tested as such in a turret fitted to a modified Vickers Wellington II. This was not adopted for service.

In March 1941, researchers at the Fighter Interception Unit (RAF Tangmere), fitted the fourth prototype Mk I Bristol Beaufighter night fighter (s/n R2055) with the Vickers S, installed asymmetrically, in the place of one of the standard 20 mm cannon. In August, the Rolls-Royce 40 mm cannon ("R" model) was also trialled in the same Beaufighter. Both cannons were assessed when fired in the air and on the ground. In October, the Vickers S was recommended for any future service use, although it was never incorporated into production Beaufighters. (The reasons for this have remained unclear, although it may have reflected the perception that a single 40 mm cannon lacked advantages over the 2x20 mm configuration. In addition, Hawker Hurricanes, fitted with two Vickers S were trialled virtually simultaneously in North Africa, in the anti-tank role and this concept was also rejected; see following section.)

Combat history

Early operations by the Desert Air Force in the North Africa campaign demonstrated that existing weapons were ineffective against newer German vehicles like the Panzer III. In April 1941 a group formed to study the issue, considered a series of 37 and 40 mm weapons including the "S", the Rolls-Royce cannon ("BF" variant), and the US-built M4 autocannon, all firing armour-piercing ammunition.[4] The Rolls-Royce"BF" was initially selected, as it used drum-fed ammunition rather than the "S" belt system, which was considered more reliable. About 200 BF guns were produced, but after a series of misfires and ammunition explosions,[2] the decision was made to introduce ground attack variants of the Hawker Hurricane with the "S". This had the added advantage that it carried 15 rounds of ammunition, compared to the "BF"'s 12.

Mark IID and Mark IV Hurricanes could mount one "S" under each wing, in conformal gun pods. The weight of the guns and ammunition, along with the dust filters and other equipment needed for desert operations, slowed the aircraft by a significant 40 miles per hour (64 km/h). By October 1941 it was decided that the autocannon would not be suitable in the future, and the same research group turned their attention to rockets, eventually leading to the introduction of the RP-3 in 1943.

The weapon was cleared for service on the Hurricane in April 1942 and formed up with No. 6 Squadron RAF at RAF Shandur in Egypt in May. The weapon's champion, Wing Commander Stephen Dru Drury, trained the pilots on using the weapon, as it had so much recoil that the aircraft slowed significantly when fired. This caused the nose to drop, and while flying at a typical altitude of 50 feet during the approach, firing without first re-adjusting the flight path was dangerous. The pilots eventually concluded that the guns could be fired twice before the aircraft flew past the target, although on rare occasions a third shot was possible.[2]

Claims by pilots using the Vickers S included 47 tanks destroyed (of 148 tanks hit), as well as nearly 200 other vehicles. However, the Hurricane IID was poorly armoured for the ground attack role and ground fire caused heavy losses. In addition, 40 mm ammunition was seldom effective against vehicles as well-armoured as the Tiger I tank.

Mark IV Hurricanes (operational from 1943) had improved armour around their engine, cockpit and fuel tanks.

From 1944, Hurricanes armed with the Vickers S served in the South East Asian theatre. In most cases HE ammunition was used against road vehicles and river craft.

Assessments carried out in South East Asia showed a relatively high level of accuracy: an average of 25% of shots fired at tanks hit their target. (By comparison, RP-3 60 pounds (27 kg) rocket projectiles only 5% against tank-sized targets.) However, 40 mm HE rounds were twice as accurate as AP rounds, possibly because the lower weight and higher velocity of the HE round gave it ballistics similar to that of the .303 in (7.7 mm) Browning machine gun that were used for sighting.

Aircraft weapons of comparable role and era

 Empire of Japan
  • 37 mm Ho-203 – automatic ground-attack/anti-bomber gun
  • 57 mm Ho-401 – automatic ground-attack gun
 Nazi Germany
  • 30 mm MK 103 – automatic anti-tank/anti-bomber gun
  • 37 mm BK 3,7 – automatic anti-tank/ground-attack gun
  • 50 mm BK 5 – automatic anti-tank/anti-bomber gun
  • 50 mm MK 214A – automatic anti-tank/anti-bomber gun
 Soviet Union
  • 37 mm NS-37 – automatic anti-tank/anti-bomber gun
  • 45 mm NS-45 – automatic anti-tank/anti-bomber gun
 Sweden
  • 57 mm akan m/47 – automatic anti-ship/ground-attack gun
 United Kingdom
  • 40 mm Rolls-Royce Class BH – automatic anti-tank/ground-attack gun (development rival to the Vickers 40 mm Class S gun)
  • 57 mm QF 6pdr Class M – autoloaded anti-ship gun (part of the same naming family as the Vickers 40 mm Class S)

Footnotes

  1. The name of the gun is spelled differently throughout books and the internet, thus it has been standardised here as the Vickers 40 mm Class S following the same format as the similar Molins Class M gun, which had the formal name "QF 6pdr Class M Mark I with Auto Loader Mk III".[1] Format: Company, Caliber, Class + type-letter, followed by mark-number etc.

References

Citations

External links