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San Shiki (anti-aircraft shell)

San-shiki-dan was a World War II-era combined shrapnel and incendiary anti-aircraft round used by the Imperial Japanese Navy. They were supposedly referred to as Beehive rounds. The shells were intended to create a large volume of flame which attacking aircraft would have to fly through. However, U.S. pilots considered these shells to be more of a pyrotechnics display than an effective anti-aircraft weapon.

Specifications
These shells were composed of: • Incendiary tubes: • The tubes were a hollow steel cylinder, long and diameter, filled with "rubber thermite" (45% elektron, 40% barium nitrate, 9.3% polysulfide synthetic rubber, 5% natural rubber, 0.5% sulphur, 0.2% stearic acid) and ignited through holes on both sides. • Once the shell exploded, the incendiary tubes ignited about a half-second later and burned for 5 seconds with long flames, • Steel stays, which held the shell structurally during its deployment and forming part of the shrapnel fragment, • An explosive charge at its base, used to create a dispersion cone, to create the barrier wall, • A delay fuze (Type 91 Shiki), which was adjusted for each shot to change the triggering altitude of the explosive charge, • A wooden warhead body, painted red. Depending on the caliber, the composition of the shells could vary: During repairs after Operation Tungsten, the German battleship Tirpitz also used a specially-fuzed variation of this shell for its guns, for antiaircraft barrage fire. ==Operational history==
Operational history
The Sanshiki anti-aircraft shells were used for shore bombardment during the Battle for Henderson Field. On 13 October 1942, in order to help protect the transit of an important supply convoy to Guadalcanal that consisted of six slower cargo ships, the Japanese Combined Fleet commander Isoroku Yamamoto sent a naval force from Truk—commanded by Vice-Admiral Takeo Kurita—to bombard Henderson Field. Kurita's force—consisting of the battleships and , escorted by one light cruiser and nine destroyers—approached Guadalcanal unopposed and opened fire on Henderson Field at 01:33 on 14 October. Over the next 83 minutes, they fired 973 of the main gun shells, of which 104 were Type 3s fired by Kongō. The rest of the shells were 189 Type 0 "HE" shells and 625 Type 1 "AP" shells which fell into the Lunga perimeter, most of them falling in and around the area of the airfield. The bombardment heavily damaged the airfield's two runways, burned almost all of the available aviation fuel, destroyed 48 of the CAF's ("Cactus Air Force") 90 aircraft, and killed 41 men, including six CAF aircrew. During the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal on 13 November 1942, another Japanese naval force attempted to bombard Henderson Field but before they could reach their target they were intercepted by American cruisers and destroyers. The first few salvos from the battleships and consisted of the Sanshiki anti-aircraft shells, as their crews were not expecting a ship-to-ship confrontation and took several minutes to switch to armor-piercing ammunition, with several Sanshiki shells hitting the cruiser , causing less serious damage than that which would have been inflicted by armor-piercing shells. Even though the 3 Shiki tsûjôdan shells comprised 40% of the total main ammunition load of the Yamato-class battleships by 1944, they were rarely used in combat against enemy aircraft. The blast of the main guns turned out to disrupt the fire of the smaller antiaircraft guns. In addition the copper driving bands of the rounds were poorly machined and constant firing was damaging to the gun rifling; indeed, one of the shells may have exploded early and disabled one of s guns during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea. fired these shells in two separate instances during Operation Ten-Go, first against PBM Mariner flying boats shadowing her, and later against the attacking aircraft of Task Force 58. ==Notes==
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