GUNS THAT PLAY HIDE-AND-SEEK
A very ingenious invention is the disappearing-mount which is used on our coast fortifications. By means of this a gun is hidden beyond its breastworks so that it is absolutely invisible to the enemy. In this sheltered position it is loaded and aimed. It is not necessary to sight the gun on the target as you would sight a rifle. The aiming is done mathematically. Off at some convenient observation post, an observer gets the range of the target and telephones this range to the plotting-room, where a rapid calculation is made as to how much the gun should be elevated and swung to the right or the left. This calculation is then sent on to the gunners, who adjust the gun accordingly. When all is ready, the gun is raised by hydraulic pressure, and just as it rises above the parapet it is automatically fired. The recoil throws the gun back to its crouching position behind the breastworks. All that the enemy sees, if anything, is the flash of the discharge.
Now that airplanes have been invented, the disappearing-mount has lost much of its usefulness. Big guns have to be hidden from above. They are usually located behind a hill, five or six miles back of the trenches, where the enemy cannot see them from the ground, and they are carefully hidden under trees or a canopy of foliage or are disguised with paint.
The huge guns recently built to defend our coasts are intended to fire a shell that will pierce the heavy armor of a modern dreadnought. The shell is arranged to explode after it has penetrated the armor, and the penetrating-power is a very important matter. About thirty years ago the British built three battle-ships, each fitted with two guns of 16ΒΌ-inch caliber and 30-caliber length. In order to test the penetrating-power of this gun a target was built, consisting first of twenty inches of steel armor and eight inches of wrought-iron; this was backed by twenty feet of oak, five feet of granite, eleven feet of concrete, and six feet of brick. When the shell struck this target it passed through the steel, the iron, the oak, the granite, and the concrete, and did not stop until it had penetrated three feet of the brick. We have not subjected our 16-inch gun to such a test, but we know that it would go through two such targets and still have plenty of energy left. Incidentally, it costs us $1,680 each time the big gun is fired.