Vickers 10 inch /45 naval gun

The Vickers 10 inch naval gun was used on battleships of the early part of the 20th century. They were built and used as the Type 41 10-inch /45-caliber on the British-built semi-dreadnought and s of the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Japanese service
The Type 41 10 in naval gun was designed by Vickers specifically for the Imperial Japanese Navy, and was of a very similar design to the Vickers-built Mark VII guns produced initially for the Chilean Navy and later used in Royal Navy service.

The used these weapons as secondary armament. The was originally intended to be built with all 12 in guns, which would have made this class the first true all big gun dreadnought class in the world; however, budgetary constraints forced the Japanese navy to use a mixture of 12 in and 10-in guns, as per the previous Kashima class.

The gun was officially designated as "Type 41" from the 41st year of the reign of Emperor Meiji on 25 December 1908. It was further re-designated in centimeters on 5 October 1917 as part of the standardization process for the Imperial Japanese Navy to the metric system.

After the scrapping of both the Katori class and the Satsuma class under the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty in 1923, the guns were salvaged and used in coastal artillery batteries. The guns formerly on the Aki were re-used in fortifications around Tokyo Bay.

The Type 41 10 in gun fired a 518 lb shell with either an armor piercing, high explosive or general purpose warhead.

United Kingdom service
Vickers supplied 5 of their 10-inch 45-calibre guns for use on the battleship Libertad that they were building for Chile. Britain took the ship over in 1903 as HMS Triumph (1903), and the guns were designated BL 10 inch Mk VII in UK service. These guns fired a 500 lb projectile using 146 lb cordite MD propellant.