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BL 8-inch Mk VIII naval gun

The BL 8 inch gun Mark VIII was the main battery gun used on the Royal Navy's County-class cruisers, in compliance with the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922. This treaty allowed ships of not more than 10,000 tons standard displacement and with guns no larger than 8 inches (203 mm) to be excluded from total tonnage limitations on a nation's capital ships. The 10,000 ton limit was a major factor in design decisions such as turrets and gun mountings. A similar gun formed the main battery of Spanish Canarias-class cruisers. In 1930, the Royal Navy adopted the BL 6 inch Mk XXIII naval gun as the standard cruiser main battery in preference to this 8-inch gun.

Description
These guns, 50 calibres long, were built-up guns which consisted of a wire-wound tube encased within a second tube and jacket with a Welin breech block and hydraulic or hand-operated Asbury mechanism. Two cloth bags each containing of cordite were used to fire a projectile. Mark I turrets allowed gun elevation to 70 degrees to fire high-explosive shells against aircraft. Hydraulic pumps proved incapable of providing sufficient train and elevation speed to follow contemporary aircraft; so simplified version of the Mark II turrets with a maximum elevation of 50 degrees were installed in . Each gun could fire approximately five rounds per minute. Useful life expectancy was 550 effective full charges (EFC) per barrel. ==Naval service==
Naval service
The following ships mounted Mk VIII guns in 188-tonne twin turrets. • heavy cruisers : 13 ships • Canarias-class heavy cruisers : 2 ships • York-class heavy cruisers : 2 ships ==Coast defence guns==
Coast defence guns
Six single guns capable of elevating to 70 degrees were installed as coastal artillery in the Folkestone-Dover area during the Second World War. ==Ammunition==
Ammunition
File:BL8inchSAPKMkIBNTShell1943Diagram.jpg| File:BL8inchHENavalShellDiagram1934.jpg| File:428 Battery, Coastal Defence Artillery Headquarters, Dover, Kent, December 1942 TR564.jpg| ==Shell trajectory==
Shell trajectory
Range with 256 lbs. (116.1) SAPC with MV = 2,725 fps (831 mps) ==See also==
Surviving examples
A gun from HMAS Australia outside the Australian War Memorial, Canberra ==Notes==
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