You guys are sharp! Parts of the reason have already been revealed, but in addition to the much increased weight of these tubes and the way they are allowed to move, with their upper carriages to the rear during recoil upon the smooth surfaces of the chassis rails which are inclined from 3 deg to 7 deg., there is also a very subtle engineering design factor at work here. By design, the rear of the trunnion cradle is just slightly higher that the front which is in the same plane, in which lies the trunnion axis. So movement is stopped by a mechanical feature, not just weight. Field guns and mortars jump all over and sometimes rebound violently, hence the Capsquares used to retain the trunnions.
Naval cannon, even very heavy ones, use Capsquares as well due to the lurching of their carriages upon the deck while underway.
Regards,
Tracy and Mike