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Bishop (artillery)

British self-propelled gun

Bishop (artillery)

Summary

British self-propelled gun

FieldValue
nameOrdnance QF 25-pdr on Carrier Valentine 25-pdr Mk 1 "Bishop"
imageIWM-E-17430-Bishop-SP-gun-19420925.jpg
image_size300
captionBishop in the Western Desert, September 1942
originUnited Kingdom
typeSelf-propelled gun
is_artilleryyes
is_vehicleyes
is_UKyes
service1942
used_byBritish Commonwealth
Turkey
warsSecond World War
design_date1941
manufacturerBirmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company
production_date1942–1943
number149
traverse
elevation-5° to +15°
length18 ft
width9 ft
height10 ft
weight17.5 t (38,580 lb)
primary_armamentQF 25 pounder gun-howitzer
with 32 rounds
secondary_armament0.303 inch Bren light machine gun
armourhull: 0.31–2.36 in
(8-60 mm)
superstructure: 0.51–2 in (13–51 mm)
engineAEC A190 diesel
engine_power131 hp (98 kW)
pw_ratio7.4 hp/tonne
suspensioncoil sprung three-wheel bogies
vehicle_range90 mi (145 km)
speed15 mph (24 km/h)
crew4 (Commander, gunner, loader, driver)

Turkey with 32 rounds (8-60 mm) superstructure: 0.51–2 in (13–51 mm)

The Bishop, formal designation Ordnance QF 25-pdr on Carrier Valentine 25-pdr Mk 1, was a British self-propelled gun vehicle based on the Valentine tank and armed with the QF 25-pounder gun-howitzer, which could fire an 87.6 mm 11.5 kg HE shell or an armour-piercing shell. A result of a rushed attempt to create a self-propelled gun, the vehicle had numerous problems, was produced in limited numbers and was soon replaced by better designs.

Design and development

The rapid manoeuvre warfare practiced in the North African Campaign led to a requirement for a self-propelled artillery vehicle armed with the 25-pounder gun-howitzer. In June 1941, the development was entrusted to the Birmingham Railway Carriage and Wagon Company. A prototype was ready for trials by August and 100 were ordered by November 1941.

The vehicle was based on the Valentine II hull, with the turret replaced by a fixed boxy superstructure with large rear doors. It was nicknamed the Bishop for its high mitre-like superstructure.

The 25-pounder gun-howitzer was fitted in this superstructure. As a consequence of the gun mounting, the resulting vehicle had a very high silhouette, which is a disadvantage in desert warfare. The maximum elevation for the gun was limited to 15 degrees, reducing the range to 6400 yd, about half that of the same gun on a wheeled carriage. To increase range, crews would build large earthen ramps and run the Bishop onto them, tilting the vehicle back to increase the elevation. The maximum depression was 5 degrees, traverse was 8 degrees, and the vehicle could also carry a Bren light machine gun. By July 1942, 80 Bishops had been built; as the last 20 were being built, an order for a further 50 was placed, with an option for a further 200 but the tender was abandoned in favour of the American 105 mm Howitzer Motor Carriage M7. Turkey received 48 Bishops in 1943.

A Bishop deployed on an earth ramp at a former German airfield in Sicily, October 1943.

Combat history

The Bishop first saw action during the Second Battle of El Alamein in North Africa and remained in service during the early part of the Italian Campaign. Due to its limitations and the Valentine's characteristic slow speed, the Bishop was poorly received. The Bishop was replaced by the M7 Priest (105 mm) and Sexton (25-pounder) when those became available in sufficient numbers and surviving Bishops were diverted for training in self-propelled gun tactics.

British self-propelled guns with ecclesiastical names

The US 105 Millimeter Howitzer Motor Carriage M7 which replaced the Bishop, was given the service name "Priest" by the British, as part of its superstructure was said to resemble a priest's pulpit. Following this line of names, a 1942 self-propelled gun armed with the 57 mm QF 6 pounder anti-tank gun was the Deacon, and a 1943 vehicle with the QF 25-pounder on a chassis derived from the M3 Medium tank was the Sexton. This practice was continued after the war with FV433 Abbot and ended in 1993 when they were replaced with the AS-90.

Notes

Sources

  • .

References

  1. (2006). "The complete guide to tanks and armoured fighting vehicles". Hermes House.
  2. "QF 25-pdr Bishop".
  3. Mahé, Yann. (February 2011). "Le Blindorama : La Turquie, 1935 - 1945". Caraktère.
  4. Trewhitt 1999, p. 114.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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