Japan 40 cm/45 (16.1") 3rd Year Type (original) (raw)

Bow Turrets of Battleship Nagato. Detail from U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph # NH 73091.

These were the first large-caliber guns designed entirely in Japan. They were mounted afloat only on the Nagato class, but had been planned for use on the Kaga, Amagi and Kii classes of the early 1920s, all of which were canceled as a result of theWashington Naval Limitation Treaty. Those completed guns and mountings intended for the canceled ships were then used for the modernization of the Nagato class during their 1930s rebuilds and as coastal artillery, covering the southern entrance to the Sea of Japan. One of the old turrets removed from Mutsu was then installed as a static display at the Japanese Naval Academy at Etajima.

These guns were generally similar to British wire wound guns of the time but were of lighter construction, being about an inch (25 mm) less in diameter at the muzzle than the 15"/42 (38 cm) Mark I. This may indicate that they were not wire wound over their full length. Used a Welin screw breech but with an Elswick 3-motion short-arm mechanism, which resembled that used on the British18"/40 (46 cm) guns of 1917. The breech block needed to be withdrawn straight back into the carrier before it could be swung. A total of about 40 guns were manufactured at the Kure and Muroran Ironworks.

Mutsu was destroyed by a main magazine explosion on 8 June 1943. The Japanese attempted to salvage the wreck both during and shortly after the war but it was not until 1970 that a successful effort was begun. Two guns recovered from Turret #3 are now displayed at the Yamato Museum in Kure and at the Museum of Maritime Science in Tokyo.

In the early 1930s Japan did a series of design studies for Treaty (35,000 ton) battleships armed with 40 cm guns. The Naval Treaty of 1930 extended the battleship building holiday and work on this design was halted soon afterwards. In 1934, the Japanese withdrew from the League of Nations and participation in the 1922 and 1930 Naval Treaties and pursued much larger warship designs resulting in the Yamato class battleships and their 46 cm guns.

Originally designated as 41 cm/45 3rd Year Type. Redesignated as 40 cm/45 3rd Year Type on 29 March 1922. Actual bore diameter was 41.0 cm (16.14 inch).

Some of the APC shells for these guns were converted into aircraft bombs and then designated as Type 99 (Model 1939) No 80 Mark 5. It is believed that one of these destroyed USS Arizona BB-39. In 1942 the design was modified and new bombs were then designated as Type 2 (Model 1942) No 80 Mark 5 Model 1.

Designation 41 cm/45 (16.1") 3rd Year Type (Model 1914)40 cm/45 (16.1") 3rd Year Type (Model 1914)
Ship Class Used On Nagato, Kaga, Amagi and Kii Classes
Date Of Design 1914
Date In Service 1921
Gun Weight 100 tons (101.6 mt)
Gun Length oa 741.7 in (18.840 m)
Bore Length 720.24 in (18.394 m)
Rifling Length 615.3 in (15.629 m)
Number Of Grooves (84) 0.161 in deep x 0.345 in (4.1 mm x 8.754 mm)
Lands 0.259 in (6.58 mm)
Twist Uniform RH 1 in 28
Chamber Volume 28,505 in3 (467.11 dm3)
Rate Of Fire 1.5 - 2.5 rounds per minute 1 2
Type Bag
Projectile Types and Weights 1a Prior to World War II APC Type 3: N/A, but probably 2,205 lbs. (1,000 kg) APC Type 5: 2,205 lbs. (1,000 kg) APC No. 6 / Type 88: 2,205 lbs. (1,000 kg)World War II APC Type 91 2a: 2,249 lbs. (1,020 kg) Common Type 0 HE 3a: 2,069 lbs. (938.5 kg) Common Type 3 IS 4a: 2,072 lbs. (940 kg) Illum 5a: N/A
Bursting Charge APC Type 91: 32.8 lbs. (14.89 kg)Common Type 0 HE: 97.7 lbs. (44.3 kg)Others: N/A
Projectile Length APC Type 91: 68.4 in (173.85 cm)Common Type 0 HE: 55.1 in (140 cm)Common Type 3 IS: 70 in (160 cm)Others: N/A
Propellant Charge 6a 1920s - 1930s: 494 lbs. (224 kg)World War II 7a For APC Type 88 - 494 lbs. (224 kg) 110 C2 or 102 DC1 For APC Type 91 - 483 lbs. (219 kg) 110 C2 or 102 DC1
Muzzle Velocity APC Type 3: N/A, but probably 2,592 fps (790 mps)APC Type 5: 2,592 fps (790 mps)APC Type 6 / Type 88: 2,592 fps (790 mps)APC Type 91: 2,559 fps (780 mps) 8a Common Type 0 HE: 2,641 fps (805 mps)Common Type 3 IS: 2,641 fps (805 mps)Illum: 2,297 fps (700 mps)
Working Pressure 19 - 19.5 tons/in2 (3,000 - 3,070 kg/cm2)
Approximate Barrel Life 250 - 300 rounds
Ammunition stowage per gun About 90 rounds

Range of APC projectiles

Elevation Range Striking Velocity Angle of Fall
2.5 degrees 5,470 yards (5,000 m) 2,247 fps (685 mps) 3.4
5.7 degrees 10,940 yards (10,000 m) 2,001 fps (610 mps) 7.5
9.2 degrees 16,400 yards (15,000 m) 1,768 fps (539 mps) 11.8
13.5 degrees 21,870 yards (20,000 m) 1,624 fps (495 mps) 17.5
18.8 degrees 27,340 yards (25,000 m) 1,526 fps (465 mps) 24.5
25.5 degrees 32,810 yards (30,000 m) 1,516 fps (462 mps) 34.0
43.0 degrees(max elevationof turret) 42,350 yards (38,725 m) --- ---

Range of HE projectiles

Elevation Range
43.0 degrees 33,930 yards (31,025 m)
Range Side Armor Deck Armor
0 yards (0 m) --- ---
21,872 yards (20,000 m) 10.6" (269 mm) ---
32,808 yards (30,000 m) 8.0" (203 mm) ---

This data is from "Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II" and is based upon the USN Empirical Armor Penetration Formula.

Characteristic Type 99 (Model 1939) No 80 Mark 5 Type 2 (Model 1942) No 80 Mark 5 Model 1
Total Weight 1,757 lbs. (796.8 kg) 1,788 lbs. (811.2 kg)
Bursting Charge 49.4 lbs. (22.4 kg) TNA 78.7 lbs. (35.7 kg) TNA
Length oa 92.6 in (235.1 cm) 91.7 in (233.0 cm)
Diameter 16.1 in (40.9 cm) 15.9 in (40.4 cm)
Nose thickness 19.17 in (48.7 cm) 11.97 in (30.4 cm)

Sketch of Type 99 Bomb from "Hawaii Operation."

Designation Two-gun Turrets Original Design 1c: Nagato (4) New Design 2c: Kaga (5), Amagi (5) and Kii (5)
Weight 1,004 tons (1,020 mt)
Elevation 2c Original Design: -5 / +30 degreesNew Design: -3 / +35 degreesNagato class as modernized: -3 / +43 degreesCoastal Defense turrets: -2 / +35 degrees
Rate of Elevation 5 degrees per second
Train about +/- 130 degrees 3c
Rate of Train 3 degrees per second
Gun Recoil N/A
Loading Angle 1c As commissioned: -5 to +20 degreesAs rebuilt: +3 degrees

"Naval Weapons of World War Two" by John Campbell
"Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II" by W.H. Garzke, Jr. and R.O. Dulin, Jr.
"Zukai hachihachi kantai no shuryokukan" (Battleships and Battlecruisers of the "8-8" Fleet) by Okumoto GoÌ
"The Japanese Warships of the Pacific War" by The Koku-Fan
"Japanese Cruisers of the Pacific War" by Eric Lacroix and Linton Wells II
"The Yamato Class and Subsequent Planning" by Hans Lengerer and Lars Ahlberg
"The World Wonder'd: What Really Happened Off Samar" by Robert Lundgren
"Resurrection: Salvaging the Battle Fleet at Pearl Harbor" by Daniel Madsen
"Ship's Data IJN Warships 1868-1945 - Part 1 Battleships and Battlecruisers" by Ishibashi Takao
"All about Japanese Naval Shipboard Weapons" by Yamamoto Yoshihide and Yoshihara Ganya
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US Naval Technical Mission to Japan report O-19: Japanese Projectiles General Types
US Naval Technical Mission to Japan report O-21: Japanese Interior Ballistics
US Naval Technical Mission to Japan report O-47(N)-1: Japanese Naval Guns and Mounts-Article 1, Mounts Under 18"
US Naval Technical Mission to Japan report O-55(N): "Defenses of Tsushima and Entrance to Sea of Japan"
US Army Report "Survey of Japanese Seacoast Artillery, 1946"
NPG Report No. 269: Ballistic Test and Metallurgical Examination of Japanese 8", 14", 16" and 18" Armor Piercing Projectiles
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"Hawaii Operation" and "Brief History of the Naval Air Squadron" both by War History Branch, National Institute for Defense Studies
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"Nagato Details" an unpublished paper by Sander Kindsepp
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Iki Fortress Kurosaki Battery
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Special help from Robert Lundgren, J. Bren and Kater Yip

19 April 2007 - Benchmark
11 May 2009 - Fixed typographical error and added photograph of Mutsu
26 June 2012 - Added sketch of shell cages and photograph of turret at Etajima
30 June 2012 - Added information about surviving guns, turret designs, armor thickness, use as coastal artillery and flashtightness of turrets
26 July 2014 - Added additional information about turrets intended for cancelled ships
11 July 2015 - Added splash color note
27 August 2015 - Added photograph of 40 cm projectiles
27 September 2015 - Added armor penetration table
06 November 2015 - Added photographs of Mutsu gun and projectiles
15 September 2016 - Merged datapage for proposed 1930s designs
10 October 2016 - Converted to HTML 5 format
13 December 2016 - Added sketch and additional data for Type 99 bomb
10 June 2018 - Reorganized notes
21 March 2019 - Added note regarding time fuzes on Common Type 0 HE
21 August 2019 - Minor changes
19 December 2019 - Added photographs of turret salvaged from Mutsu, added new gun muzzle velocity note
14 June 2020 - Added information on bombs dropped at Pearl Harbor
24 December 2020 - Added comment about Type 88 projectiles being inspected by Australian troops
31 July 2021 - Minor changes for clarity
11 November 2021 - Added photograph of first test shot
21 September 2022 - Added photographs of stern turrets of Nagato and of gun breech mechanism
18 March 2023 - Added link to Iki Fortress Kurosaki Battery (Japanese Language)
18 December 2023 - Added note regarding maximum turret train angle, sketch of Type 91 APC and fixed broken link
19 April 2024 - Added propellant information