, South Africa , United Kingdom Of the original ninety-eight 9.2-inch guns that did service worldwide during WWII, only twenty-nine remain. Of these twenty-nine, thirteen are in South Africa, the De Waal Battery No. 3 gun being the only gun in the world that has been restored as a moving display. ;Australia • two 9.2-inch guns in the Oliver Hill Battery on
Rottnest Island, off
Fremantle, Western Australia. One, known as the H1 Gun, is restored; its companion H2 Gun is awaiting restoration ;Bermuda • two Mk X guns on
St. David's Island, on Mark V Barbette mounts, at
St. David's Battery, overlooking the Narrows Channel that leads to
St. George's Harbour, in Bermuda, as well as to the
Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda, the
Great Sound,
Hamilton Harbour, and
Murray's Anchorage. The battery forms part of Great Head Park, and there is public access. • one Mk X gun, previously at
Fort Victoria on St. George's Island, since relocated to the
Bermuda Maritime Museum at the Royal Naval Dockyard to make way for a hotel development, and was emplaced (though not on its mount) for display in the Keep of the fortified dockyard in 2021, after eleven years of storage. ;Gibraltar • three 9.2-inch guns, one each at
O'Hara's Battery,
Lord Airey's Battery and
Breakneck Battery ;Greece • four 234 mm (9.2 in) guns, mounted in pairs in turrets on the Greek armoured cruiser , now a
museum ship in Faliron Bay near Athens. ;Portugal • three 9.2-inch guns in good condition at Bateria da Raposa, Fonte da Telha, near
Almada. • one 9.2-inch gun of the original three of the Alcabideche battery, near
Cascais, is partly preserved and accessible (but no entry) to pedestrians, in the centre roundabout of the staff and services parking at the back of the new Cascais Hospital. All of these guns were part of the post- World War II coastal defences of Portugal developed under the
Barron Plan. ;South Africa • three 9.2-inch guns in the Da Gama Battery on
the Bluff, Durban • one 9.2-inch gun in a unique
disappearing mount in Fort Wynyard,
Green Point near central Cape Town • three 9.2-inch guns in the Apostle Battery above
Llandudno, Cape Town • three 9.2-inch guns in the De Waal Battery on
Robben Island off Cape Town, one restored to full operation (see below) • three 9.2-inch guns in the Scala Battery near
Simon's Town, Cape Town ;United Kingdom • one Mk X Gun at the
Imperial War Museum Duxford ex Spur Battery, Gibraltar, transferred in
Project Vitello The official opening of the restored De Waal Battery on Robben Island, near Cape Town, South Africa, took place on 4 March 2011. The ceremony involved the unveiling and demonstration of the No 3 Gun of the battery of three Ordnance BL 9.2in Coast Defence Guns. The gun in question, an "Ordnance BL 9.2in Coast Defence Gun on a Mk VII mounting", has been restored as a moving display, with all the hydraulics working, enabling the turret to be fully traversed through 360°, the gun being elevated to 25° and the loading/ramming mechanism fully operational. Plans are afoot to restore the nearby Scala Battery at Simon's Town on the mainland as a static display. On Western Australia's Rottnest Island the H1 gun and associated underground resources are open to visitors as a static display. On 10 December 1998 the Portuguese Coast Artillery fired the last shots from the 6th Battery of its "Fonte da Telha" 9.2-inch (23.4 cm) guns. The fate of the several Coast Artillery Regiment batteries and their weapons has not yet been determined, but it is known that it is the intent of the Army to conserve one for the future Museum of Coast Artillery. == British ammunition up to World War I ==