Loader (equipment): Difference between revisions

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<!-- [[File:LoadingTeacher.jpg|thumb|240px| '''Percy Scott's "Loader"'''<ref>''Aim Straight'', by Peter Padfield, Hodder and Soughton, London (1966).</ref>]] -->
<!-- [[File:LoadingTeacher.jpg|thumb|240px| '''Percy Scott's "Loader"'''<ref>''Aim Straight'', by Peter Padfield, Hodder and Soughton, London (1966).</ref>]] -->
The '''Loader''' (or '''Loading Teacher''') was an mock-up of the breech of a hand-loaded gun created around 1900<ref>''Aim Straight'', p. 114.</ref> by [[Percy Moreton Scott, First Baronet|Percy Scott]] to permit gun crews to to practice efficient loading without the concomitant wear and tear that would result by use of an actual gun and to obviate the need to withdraw the shell from the weapon after each loading cycle.  Along with the [[Dotter]], it became one of the hallmarks of Scott's transformation of Royal Navy gunnery and exemplified how his innovations were often syntheses of drill and equipment.
The '''Loader''' (or '''Loading Teacher''') was a mock-up of the breech of a hand-loaded gun created around 1900<ref>''Aim Straight'', p. 114.</ref> by [[Percy Moreton Scott, First Baronet|Percy Scott]] to permit gun crews to to practice efficient loading without the concomitant wear and tear that would result by use of an actual gun and to obviate the need to withdraw the shell from the weapon after each loading cycle.  Along with the [[Dotter]], it became one of the hallmarks of Scott's transformation of Royal Navy gunnery and exemplified how his innovations were often syntheses of drill and equipment.


In addition to a gun breech, the loader had a trough in place of a barrel of such length that the shell should slide to a gentle stop at the end if it had been rammed with the proper force to engage the rifling of an actual gun.  The shell would then be handed to a position where it could be taken in hand as a new shell being brought up for firing.  In this way, a few inert shells would suffice to keep a crew working continually so their speed and endurance could be tested to whatever extent seemed prudent.  Any other appliances particular to the gun in question would be simulated and used in the drill.<ref>''Manual of Gunnery (Volume III) for His Majesty's Fleet, 1915'', pp. 134-135.</ref>
In addition to a gun breech, the loader had a trough in place of a barrel of such length that the shell should slide to a gentle stop at the end if it had been rammed with the proper force to engage the rifling of an actual gun.  The shell would then be handed to a position where it could be taken in hand as a new shell being brought up for firing.  In this way, a few inert shells would suffice to keep a crew working continually so their speed and endurance could be tested to whatever extent seemed prudent.  Any other appliances particular to the gun in question would be simulated and used in the drill.<ref>''Manual of Gunnery (Volume III) for His Majesty's Fleet, 1915'', pp. 134-135.</ref>

Revision as of 17:05, 15 June 2011

The Loader (or Loading Teacher) was a mock-up of the breech of a hand-loaded gun created around 1900[1] by Percy Scott to permit gun crews to to practice efficient loading without the concomitant wear and tear that would result by use of an actual gun and to obviate the need to withdraw the shell from the weapon after each loading cycle. Along with the Dotter, it became one of the hallmarks of Scott's transformation of Royal Navy gunnery and exemplified how his innovations were often syntheses of drill and equipment.

In addition to a gun breech, the loader had a trough in place of a barrel of such length that the shell should slide to a gentle stop at the end if it had been rammed with the proper force to engage the rifling of an actual gun. The shell would then be handed to a position where it could be taken in hand as a new shell being brought up for firing. In this way, a few inert shells would suffice to keep a crew working continually so their speed and endurance could be tested to whatever extent seemed prudent. Any other appliances particular to the gun in question would be simulated and used in the drill.[2]

In preparation for the 1901 Prize Firings, Scott's crews in Terrible could load 100 pound shells and 55 pound cartridges twenty cycles in ninety seconds.[3]

Similar Arrangements

Larger guns and the Vickers semi-automatic 4-inch gun had wooden shells (sometimes wrapped in cowhide to protect the rifling) and dummy cartridges for practice use at the guns.[4]

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Aim Straight, p. 114.
  2. Manual of Gunnery (Volume III) for His Majesty's Fleet, 1915, pp. 134-135.
  3. Aim Straight, p. 114.
  4. Manual of Gunnery (Volume III) for His Majesty's Fleet, 1915, p. 134.

Bibliography