K5 development began in 1934 with first testing following in 1936 at
Darlowo (German:
Schießplatz Rügenwalde-Bad) in the former
Farther Pomerania at the South coast of the
Baltic Sea. Initial tests were done with a 150 mm barrel under the designation
K5M. Production led to eight guns being in service for the
Invasion of France, although problems were encountered with barrel splitting and rectified with changes to the rifling. The guns were then reliable until the end of the war, under the designation
K5 Tiefzug 7 mm. Three were installed on the
English Channel coast and were intended to
target British shipping in the Channel, but proved unsuccessful. Two K5 guns, named
Robert and
Leopold by German crews, were shipped to Italy to help counter the
Allied landing at the town of Anzio in February 1944. The Allied soldiers stuck on the beach nicknamed the two German guns "Anzio Annie" and "Anzio Express" due to the express train-like sound the shells generated. On 18 May 1944 the guns fired off their remaining ammunition and then escaped along the coastal railroad into the rail yard in
Civitavecchia, in preparation for evacuation. This proved impossible and the guns were destroyed by their crews. Towards the end of the war, longer-range
rocket-assisted projectiles were successfully fired from the
K5Vz. A final experiment was to bore out two of the weapons to smoothbore to allow firing of the Peenemünder Pfeilgeschosse arrow shells. These were designated
K5 Glatt. It is not clear if they were ever used in combat. Other proposals to modify or create new models of the K5 never saw production, including one that could leave the railway with modified
Tiger II tank chassis replacing the two railroad bogies. This project ended with the defeat of Nazi Germany. ==Projectiles==