Napoleon Field Gun, 12" wheels, Bbl is 15 1/2 in length, bore is 1.035", 2 1/2 " dia at breech, 2 .125" muzzle. Carriage is kiln dried red oak. Got it from Cannon Mania. It is strongly recommended that it shoot only salutes as it's felt the carriage will not take the recoil of service loads.
Dahlgren. It's a one inch bore with a very heavy cast iron carriage. Shoots a .960 ball (wheel weights) and is an accurate little gun due to the large screw type elevating device, much like the originals. Got this one from South Bend Replicas about eight years ago. Steel sleeved (seamless of course) and quite heavy.
Siege mortar with turned steel tube. Has an aluminum carriage/platform all drilled to accept a wooden base. Right now it has no elevation mechanism but a small rod across the bottom of the tube will keep it in place. You can plainly see the small aluminum rod holding the tube up. It will take a Coors Beer can, with concrete, with ease but a regular cola or regular size beer can is just a slip fit without any extra room. If one were to hold the touch hole while the projectile is entering the muzzle, it'd go down to the chamber very slow. That's a little too tight for my comfort/safety. It will also take a pvc pipe filled with mortar/concrete.
(Moderator note...of course it's Coors, Bob's in Colorado)Coehorn Mortar. It uses a 35 m/m film canister filled with mortar/concrete as a projectile. Can't find the aluminum film containers anymore so have to utilize the plastic ones.
Enfield field gun of the 1880's. It's made of carbon steel w/threaded breech plug (welded in place) and fully jacketed breech. The wheels are cast steel w/roller bearings and solid rubber tires. It's black parkerized. Is .50 Cal. and shoots a .490 lead ball or a .45 ACP case full wheel weight lead. Is 21-inches OL. Is to take same amount of FG as that of a .50 TC Pistol. Weighs 15 lbs and I got it from Cannon Mania.
This is a 6 pounder that from Kansas Cannon Works. The barrel is a one inch, lathe turned & bored. Trunions are set in milled pockets in the barrel then J.B. welded in place. Carriage and wheels are oak with a steel axle.
Replica of a British 2.5-inch RML (7-pounder) Mountain (screw) Gun circa 1865 on an updated Carriage. Was used by Indian Mt. Artillery clear up into The Great War.