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pattern 1913の例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • The secondary armament consisted of twenty / 55-caliber B7 Pattern 1913 guns mounted in casemates.
  • The secondary armament consisted of twenty-four 55-calibre 130 mm Pattern 1913 guns mounted in casemates.
  • The Pattern 1914 Enfield was the successor to the Pattern 1913 Enfield experimental rifle and the predecessor of the U . S . Rifle M1917 Enfield.
  • The experimental Pattern 1913 Enfield rifle featured a Mauser-type action that was very substantial and designed to be stronger than the Lee Enfield action.
  • In late 1915, she was refit and repaired in Kronstadt, and her main armament was upgraded to 130 mm / 55 B7 Pattern 1913 guns.
  • The "'. 276 Enfield "'was an experimental military rifle cartridge developed in conjunction with the Pattern 1913 Enfield ( P'13 ) rifle.
  • The increase in size of the " Svetlana " s during the design process allowed their main armament to be increased from 12 to 15 Pattern 1913 guns in single mounts.
  • In order to match the performance of the longer barreled 130 mm / 55 Pattern 1913 gun it was necessary to use a higher barrel pressure in the 130 mm / 50 B13 Pattern 1936.
  • This development, named the Pattern 1913 Enfield or P13, included a front locking, dual lug bolt action with Mauser type claw extractor as well as a new, powerful rimless . 276 Enfield cartridge.
  • In 1929 design work began in the Soviet Union for a new 130 mm 45 caliber submarine deck gun that would have the same external ballistics as the older 130 mm / 55 B7 Pattern 1913 gun.
  • The Pattern 1913 Enfield like the Mauser Gewehr 98 had no magazine cut-off mechanism, which when engaged permits the feeding and extraction of single cartridges only while keeping the cartridges in the magazine in reserve.
  • The Soviet Navy retained the 130mm / 55 Pattern 1913 naval gun and produced additional guns under the designation B-7, as the OSP had been renamed Works No . 232 " Bolshevik " in 1922.
  • The "'130mm / 55 B7 Pattern 1913 naval gun "'was a 5.1-inch naval gun used predominantly on ships of the Imperial Russian Navy and later by the Soviet Navy.
  • The trials took place in Britain, Ireland, Egypt and South Africa and at the end, the Chief Inspector of Small Arms recommended a number of changes, which resulted in a quantity of 6 improved Pattern 1913 rifles being manufactured between March and April 1914.
  • Due to the original Pattern 1913 Enfield action being designed around the high-powered . 276 Enfield experimental cartridge with a larger diameter case than the . 303 British, the internal box magazine capacity for the smaller diameter . 303 British was six rounds, although the employed stripper clips held only five cartridges.