As the next instalment in my weaponry posts, here are some snaps I took of a 4 barrelled Nordenfelt gun I came across at the Tower of London recently.
The Business end - note this particular gun was captured from the Ottomans at Gallipoli |
The organ gun design of this weapon was patented in 1873 and ammunition was gravity fed from a hopper above the breach (see diagram below) and fired in volleys. The Nordenfelt came in various calibers, many of them .45 small arms, but this particular version is the larger 1-inch model which fired solid shot (explosive shot being banned by treaty). Primarily designed for torpedo boat defence, it also had an excellent capability to suppress shore targets.
This is how the two man crew operated with the gunner loading and firing while the gun captain aimed via the elevation and training hand wheels
And if you want to go really mad for the Nordenfelt, here is a copy of the drill manual used by the Victorian Navy: Handbook of the 1" 4-barrel Nordenfelt gun, 1894
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More facts from the Old British Guns site here: http://oldbritishguns.com/the-nordenfelt-gun
The 19th Century saw a proliferation of hand operated machine guns, that was kicked off by the success of the Gatling Gun. In the beginning, the Nordenfelt gun had 4 to 10 barrels operated by a crank on the right side, using back and forth motion as opposed to the Gatlings rotary handle. Invented and built by the Swedes, the British Navy adopted it in the 1870's, mainly in calibers as large as 25mm for use against the new torpedo boat threat.
However, in rifle calibers, the gun can keep up a semblance of automatic fire by how quickly the handle is operated and the ammunition kept supplied. In a test by the British, the gun demonstrated 3000 rounds a minute with no stoppages. During the Sudan War in the 1880s, the Nordenfelt was mounted on General Gordons Nile riverboat fleet, to good effect. In the end the Maxim gun replaced this, as well as the Gatlings in British service, when the Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Company was absorbed by Hiram Maxim in 1888.
The Nordenfelt was fielded by the British navy to counter the new torpedo boats, which were quickly spreading to all navies in the late 1870's. A small fast steam powered boat loaded with torpedo's could take down a capital ship, and losing some of these cheap boats in the attempt would pose little loss for the user. In the end, the defense against the torpedo boat became a new class of fast fighting ship, the destroyer.
Hah, was one in a park in Bundaberg (small Queensland town) I used to play in as a kid. Was some muzzle loaders of similar era there too....
ReplyDeleteAnd a happy New Year to you, too!
ReplyDeleteThere are videos of the Nordenfelt firing on Youtube but the best example I have seen was in the movie Khartoum where there is a brief sequence of a 5 barrel firing from a river boat. You can hear the ripple as each barrel fires in rapid succession.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this - great reference.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year!
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