Royal Navy service As the
QF 6-inch Mk I, Mk II and Mk III, the gun was used as
secondary armament of pre-dreadnoughts of the 1890s and cruisers to 1905. On the
protected cruisers of the
Diadem,
Powerful and
Edgar classes they made up most of the armament, though the latter class carried two guns as well. The pre-dreadnought battleship classes of the -class (including the turreted -class, -class, -class and -class ships carried up to 12 guns.
Second Boer War land service During the
Second Boer War one gun was brought ashore from in
Natal in February 1900 at the request of General
Redvers Buller, presumably in response to the failure at
Colenso. It was mounted on an improvised field carriage by Captain
Percy Scott and transported by rail to Chieveley, just south of Colenso. There it was manned by Royal Navy gunners to provide useful fire support for the
British Army during the
relief of Ladysmith. It is reported on 17 February to have fired from "Gun Hill" (a small
kopje two miles (3 km) north of Chieveley) and knocked out a Boer gun at , followed by a Boer searchlight, as Buller approached Ladysmith from the South East and pushed the Boers back towards the Tugela river. On 26 February Lieutenant Burne reports firing from the same position on a Boer gun at at 28° elevation and falling short. The 7-ton weight (compared to the 2½ tons of the Boer
155 mm "Long Tom") meant that it was effectively immobile on the battlefield and could not be moved forward to shorten the range. Two guns were also mounted on
armoured trains, crewed by the
Royal Garrison Artillery.
Coast defence gun From 1894 a number of guns were adapted for coast defence use, with the original 3-motion breeches replaced by modern single-motion breeches to increase the rate of fire, which designated them as "B" guns. Nineteen guns were still active in the defence of the UK as at April 1918 :
Jersey (2),
Guernsey (2),
Alderney (2),
Shoeburyness (2), Blyth (2),
Clyde Garrison (1),
Mersey (2), Berehaven Garrison (
Bantry Bay, Ireland) (6).
World War I anti-aircraft gun At least one gun is known to have been mounted by the Royal Navy on an improvised anti-aircraft mounting on a railway truck, defending docks during the First World War.
Conversion to 8 inch (203 mm) howitzer In World War I Britain urgently needed heavy artillery on the
Western Front, and various obsolete 6-inch naval guns were converted to 8-inch howitzers. Sixty-three QF 6-inch Mk II guns were shortened, bored out to and converted to
BL type to produce the BL 8-inch howitzer Mk V. Four entered service in December 1915 and 59 followed in 1916. == Italian naval service ==