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Cannon balls

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There was something I saw or read somewhere that showed a cannon being loaded with a handful of straw rammed down on the powder before the ball was loaded. I'm not sure if this was common practice, a field expedient, or somebodies fantasy, but it seems like it would be a fire hazard unless the straw was damp or completely consumed before leaving the muzzle.
 
Does anyone patch cannon balls
They used to strap them to the wad, aka the sabot. I don't think this snugged them up in the bore, but maybe did seal some of the gasses....

Gibbon's Artillerist Manual, 1860

The Artillerist Manual 1860 B.JPG


LD
 
My 1lb gun I have used a patched ball and bare ball, I found no difference in accuracy, I always use the bare ball, less chance of flaming debris everywhere. Gun is accurate enough to hit a 30 gal drum at 300 yards, and I have hit a 55gal drum at 900 yards about 1 in 3 shots, all were very close.
 
My 1lb gun I have used a patched ball and bare ball, I found no difference in accuracy, I always use the bare ball, less chance of flaming debris everywhere. Gun is accurate enough to hit a 30 gal drum at 300 yards, and I have hit a 55gal drum at 900 yards about 1 in 3 shots, all were very close.
That’s pretty darn good.
 
This is new to me and I never thought about it. Iron balls can't deform to the bore. On a sailing ship rolling back and forth- how did they keep the balls in the bore?
 
Dont know all the tricks but i did read where a rev war brit shipwreck had loaded cannons with a big wad of cotton on top of the ball.
 
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