5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm)

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This page is about the Japanese naval cannon 5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm). For other uses, see Type 89 (Disambiguation).
Standard twin 5 inch/40 Type 89, here as an anti-aircraft weapon on IJN Kongo

Description

The 127 mm 5 inch/40 Type 89 gun is a Japanese fast-firing gun primarily found as a secondary or anti-air weapon in IJN cruisers, though it's also a primary armament of the IJN Isuzu. Historically it was widely adopted by the navy since 1932, finding use on everything from transport ships, through destroyers to battleships and aircraft carriers.

Vehicles equipped with this weapon

General info

Tell us about the tactical and technical characteristics of the cannon or machine gun.

Available ammunition

Penetration statistics
Ammunition Type of
warhead
Penetration @ 0° Angle of Attack (mm)
1,000 m 2,500 m 5,000 m 7,500 m 10,000 m 15,000 m
127 mm HE HE 25 25 25 25 25 25
127 mm HE-TF HE-TF 25 25 25 25 25 25
Shell details
Ammunition Type of
warhead
Velocity
(m/s)
Projectile
mass (kg)
Fuse delay
(m)
Fuse sensitivity
(mm)
Explosive mass
(TNT equivalent) (kg)
Ricochet
0% 50% 100%
127 mm HE HE 720 23 0 0.1 1.96 79° 80° 81°
127 mm HE-TF HE-TF 720 23 0 0.1 1.96 79° 80° 81°

Comparison with analogues

A battery of three twin 5 inch 40 Type 89 on IJN Haruna struggles to keep up with a low-flying torpedo bomber

In both anti-air and anti-shipping duties, the Type 89 is a subpar, dated weapon that suffers in all key metrics comparing to its contemporary WW2 rivals, especially when used by the IJN Isuzu or Mogami-class cruisers, where the rate of fire is just 8 rounds per minute. On larger Kongo-class the rate of fire increases to 14 rounds per minute, making it able to put 75% more rounds on target, and a vertical firing angle increases from the +85° typical for the heavy AA to +90°, getting rid of the deadzone above the ship.

Cannon Sample Ship Ammo Calibre
(mm)
Muzzle Velocity
(m/s)
Sustained rate of fire
(rounds/min)
Targeting speed
(°/s)
TNT Equivalent
(kg)
Penetration
@ 0° Angle of Attack (mm)
Horizontal Vertical 100 m 1,000 m 2,000 m
Japan flag.png 5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm) IJN Isuzu HE 127 720 8 5.1 10 1.96 25 25 25
Japan flag.png 5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm) IJN Isuzu HE-TF 127 720 8 5.1 10 1.96 25 25 25
Japan flag.png 5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm) IJN Kongo HE 127 720 14 5.1 10 1.96 25 25 25
Japan flag.png 5 inch/40 Type 89 (127 mm) IJN Kongo HE-TF 127 720 14 5.1 10 1.96 25 25 25
Japan flag.png 127 mm/50 3rd Year Type (127 mm) IJN Ayanami HE 127 910 9.1 6 27 2.31 28 28 28
Japan flag.png 127 mm/50 3rd Year Type (127 mm) IJN Ayanami HE-TF 127 910 9.1 6 27 2.31 26 26 26
USA flag.png 5 inch/25 Mk.13 AA (127 mm) USS Pensacola HE-TF 127 657 20 17 26 3.16 35 35 35
Britain flag.png 5.25 inch/50 QF Mark I (133 mm) HMS Dido HE-TF 133 814 10 8.5 8.5 2.95 35 35 35
Italy flag.png 120 mm/45 Canet-Schneider-Armstrong mod.1918-19 (120 mm) RN Leone HE-TF 120 850 7 13 13 2.39 29 29 29
Japan flag.png 120 mm/45 3rd Year Type (120 mm) IJN Mutsuki HE-TF 120 850 8.3 5 4 1.95 24 24 24
USSR flag.png 100 mm/56 B-34 (100 mm) Kirov HE-TF 100 900 15 21 17 1.93 24 24 24

Usage in battles

5 inch/40 Type 89 has high elevation angle, being able to engage dive bombers with ease

Despite of being subpar relative to the foreign equivalents, the 5 inch/40 Type 89 is still a perfectly capable anti-air gun, with a single hit usually being sufficient to take down even the largest strategic bombers. In the anti-ship role, thanks to being a dual-mount weapon, it's able to quickly take down subsystems of a destroyers, having a good chance of detonating ammunition with a near-direct hit. Any cruiser with armor thicker than 25 mm will be a struggle to take down with your ammunition (relatively common on US, British and German light cruisers, but at the rank IV and higher every cruiser has armor thick enough to stop all available shells.

Pros and cons

Pros:

  • The gun comes in a dual-mount, with both shells flying parallel, thus making for a truly destructive damage at the hit location, be it a destroyer's ammo-rack or an enemy plane
  • Being an anti-aircraft gun, it has a very good vertical guidance angles (going as far down as -8° on some mounts), making it possible to engage torpedo boats in a near-point-blank range or retain aim if the ship suffers from excessive heeling

Cons:

  • Low explosive filler, muzzle velocity and (typically) low rate of fire comparing to the closest analogues
  • Being a tight dual-mount weapon, a salvo of two HE-TF shells creates just a single, highly-localized shrapnel cloud, decreasing the chances of a random hit
  • Low targeting speed makes it tricky to hit any airplanes with a high angular velocity
  • A lack of AP, SAP or HE-VT (the anti-air shells with proximity fuze) makes for a suboptimal choice of shells against both: airborne and naval targets.

History

The 12.7 cm/40 Type 89 naval gun (12.7センチ高角砲) is a redesigned variant of the 12 cm/45 3rd Year Type, officially adopted by the IJN on 6 February 1932.

Modifications to the 120 mm/45 had several goals in mind, most notably increasing the blast radius of an individual shells (what was achieved by increasing the caliber), increasing the rate of fire (to as high as 14 shells per minute), automated setting of the time fuze and in increasing the speed in which vertical elevation could be adjusted (which was done in response to the perceived risk of the dive-bomber attacks).

Over time, however, two key limitations of the gun came to the daylight. Even a highly trained crew missed the fire rate goal, achieving sustained 12 rounds per minute, while a green crew fired only 8 rounds per minute. Also the low horizontal targeting speed turned out to be an issue, though it was eventually resolved with the Matsu-class destroyers by swapping the electric motors from older 10 kW-rated to a newer, 15 kW. Matsu-class was also the first ship to incorporate a single-mount Type 89, as previously all guns were deployed in the twin-mounts.

The gun was used in a wide array of ships, including the Yamato herself, a number of carriers like Kaga, Soryu, Shoukaku, seaplane and submarine tenders, even on the No.1-class landing ships.

Media

Excellent additions to the article would be video guides, screenshots from the game, and photos.

See also

External links


Japan naval cannons
20 mm  JM61 · Type 98
25 mm  25 mm/60 Type 96
37 mm  Type 4 · Type 11 pattern 1922
40 mm  40 mm/62 Vickers
57 mm  Type 97
75 mm  Type 88 AA
76 mm  3-inch/40 Type 41 · 8 cm/40 3rd Year Type · 8 cm/60 Type 98
100 mm  100/65 mm Type 98 mod A
120 mm  120 mm/45 3rd Year Type · 120 mm/45 10th year type
127 mm  5 inch/40 Type 89 · 127 mm/50 3rd Year Type
140 mm  140 mm/50 3rd Year Type
152 mm  6-inch/45 Type 41 · 15 cm/50 Type 41
155 mm  155 mm/60 3rd Year Type
200 mm  20 cm 3rd year type No.1
203 mm  20 cm/45 Type 41 · 20 cm/50 3rd year type No.2
356 mm  36 cm/45 Type 41
410 mm  410 mm/45 Type 3
  Foreign:
20 mm  20 mm/70 Oerlikon Mk.II (USA/Britain)
40 mm  Bofors L/60 Mark 1 (USA) · Bofors L/60 Mark 2 (USA) · Bofors L/60 Mark 3 (USA)
47 mm  3 pdr QF Hotchkiss (Britain)
76 mm  3-inch Mark 10 (USA) · 3 inch Mk.33 (USA) · 3-inch Mk.34 (USA)
120 mm  4,7-inch/40 Armstrong (Britain)
127 mm  5 inch/38 Mk.12 (USA)
305 mm  12-inch/45 Vickers (Britain) · 12-inch/50 Vickers (Britain)