- Barbette
:"For the early 20th Century female impersonator, see
Barbette (performer) A barbette is a protective circular armor feature around a
cannon or heavyartillery gun. The name comes from the French phrase "en barbette" referring to the practice of firing afield gun over aparapet (defensive wall) rather than through an opening (embrasure ). The former gives better angles of fire but less protection.Before the complete introduction of the fully enclosed armoured
gun turret s, a barbette was a fixed armoured enclosure protecting the gun. The barbette could take the form of a ring of armour around the gun mount over which the guns (possibly fitted with a gun shield) fired.In warships from the age of the dreadnought forward, the barbette is the non-rotating drum beneath the rotating gun turret (properly known as the "gunhouse") and above the armoured deck on a warship. It forms the protection for the upper ends of the hoists that lift shells and their propelling charges ("e.g."
cordite ) from the magazines below.When applied to military aircraft, a barbette is a position on an
aircraft where a gun, or guns, are in a mounting which has a restricted arc of fire when compared to a turret. The word is frequently used to describe thetail gunner position on bombers such as theB-17 Flying Fortress .The term "barbette" is often used with military aircraft of World War II, to name a remotely aimed and operated gun turret, which itself has no human presence directly "within" its mechanics-the German
Messerschmitt Me 210 andMe 410 "Hornisse" had twin remote turrets, one per side, for rearwards defense, theHeinkel He 177 had such a turret for its forward dorsal defense, and the famous AmericanB-29 Superfortress had four such remote turrets, two dorsal and two ventral, each with twinM2 Browning guns, with only the tail gun position being "directly" manned.ee also
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Disappearing gun#Naval application , a failed intermediate step between barbettes and gun turrets
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