4-inch/40-caliber gun
< 4-inch
| 4″/40 caliber Marks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 | |
|---|---|
Photograph of USS Iowa, 4-inch gun and gunner. | |
| Type | |
| Place of origin | United States |
| Service history | |
| In service | 1897—1945 |
| Used by | United States Navy |
| Wars | |
| Production history | |
| Designer | Bureau of Ordnance |
| Manufacturer |
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| No. built |
|
| Variants | Marks 1 – 6 |
| Specifications | |
| Mass |
|
| Length |
|
| Barrel length |
|
| Shell | 33 lb (15 kg) armor-piercing |
| Caliber | 4 in (102 mm) |
| Elevation | -15° to +20° |
| Traverse | −150° to +150° |
| Rate of fire | 8 – 9 round per minute |
| Muzzle velocity | 2,000 ft/s (610 m/s) |
| Effective firing range | 11,500 yd (10,500 m) at 31.2° elevation |
The 4″/40 caliber gun (spoken "four-inch-forty-caliber") was used for the secondary batteries on the United States Navy's battleship Iowa, Columbia-class protected cruisers, and the armored cruiser New York, and was the primary batteries on the gunboats Nashville, Wilmington, and Helena.