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Naval sergeant owes his gun expertise to years of hard work and observation

By LI SHANGYI | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-08-28 20:24
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Ma led his team through fundamental tasks, including checking ammunition, cleaning barrels, disassembling and inspecting mechanical parts, testing every electrical wire, and analyzing each shell's trajectory. Under his leadership, his team achieved a first-round hit and won first place among all competing vessels.

Ma Shaoli (right), a first-class naval sergeant aboard a frigate in the People's Liberation Army Navy, leads his comrades in drills. [Photo by Liu Lipeng/for chinadaily.com.cn]

Over his 27 years in the Navy, Ma has operated six types of naval artillery on four types of ships, recording every maintenance session, compiling over 150,000 words of notes and more than 400,000 data entries.

Rooted in repeated real-world exercises, Ma said: "On the battlefield, the gun is me, and I am the gun."

He analyzed every live round fired, studying ship sway, the expansion speed of propellant gases, and how wind conditions alter a shell's trajectory. His research has consistently improved first-hit rates and overall gun performance.

For Ma, true strength lies in the team. As the unit's top gunnery specialist, he shares his knowledge freely, mentoring not only his own shipmates but also personnel from other vessels, naval academies, and equipment factories.

"What happens to these skills if I fall in battle or retire?" he asked. Determined to ensure the knowledge is passed down, he set out to compile a professional textbook tailored for naval gun crews, which gained support from his unit.

Ma spent over 700 days and nights studying with experts, visiting factories, and mastering design software. Often working late into the night, he damaged his eyesight, but the effort paid off when his work was adopted as a standard Navy training manual.

Over more than two decades as a section leader, he has cultivated numerous technical backbones, many of whom have risen to positions such as ship captains or senior sergeants. More than 20 have been awarded third-class merit.

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