I'd like to have a sight for my cannon. The recoil is fierce so it should
be something that slides on and off easily and is never on when shooting.
I know there were a variety of sights used in the 19th century but I'm not too particular about historical accuracy. I'd just like something fairly cheap that could help me put a projectile in the same county as the target.
I was thinking of something like:
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(The picture will look awful in proportional font.)
This would be a view from the side.
The bottom would attach to the barrel. The top would have a sight on it.
Ideally, one of the sides of it is hinged and other side has a screw or
something so I can vertically adjust the mount.
I'd like to have the bottom fairly thin. I'd have a couple of notches in
one side. Then I'd drill, tap and locktite some screws to the barrel. The
mount would slide on. If the bottom was thin, the screws wouldn't have to
stick out far. The mount could then be slid on and off.
The top would have something that I could attach a weaver base to. It
could then have anything mounted to it.
Any ideas if such a thing exists or could be made fairly cheaply? Anybody out there ever done anything like this or have alternate suggestions?
Steve
http://www.crufflersteve.net/naval.html