Ok, I think it sounds like people are taking it a little far with the newspaper stuff. I can go into all the what if and could happen.
We kind of work of the N-SSA rules because that is what we shoot. I don't see how anyone could be shot by the paper, Everyone must be 50 feet I think it is behind the shooting line and it may be more, we have it marked and I have never walked it off. At some shoots they may be on the line if we are shooting live, because it is a comp. A few cases like in the first pic people are closer but never even close to one the line, so I see no way to hit someone. Also when we shoot live rounds that gun is a 6 lb, the recoil is big, many feet. When we shoot blanks it never moves, I don't see how the pressure could be that high. When using wet paper we only use a few pieces of paper and make it wet to cut down the risk of fire. The last shoot we even had a fire truck if any problems. Now if one of you guys would take the full sunday paper and soak it then hammer it into the gun I could see maybe a problem. I have never seen a large piece of wad on the range after shooting it looks like a little makes it to the ground if any most gets burnt.
We need to remember that we all have different guns and we all shoot different loads as with the range we shoot on.
But for people to say that someone should not shoot paper wad, or live loads because some one could get shot, is like the anti gunner saying we should not shoot cannons we should just look at them...
I can see if people say you should not use wads when people are down range that could be hit. Then I would come back with: you should never shoot anything when anyone is down range.
I know there is all types of stories about what someone did and the gun failed. People need to just be smart about shooting. I would never shoot any wad in a cast or junk made cannon but our gun is made for full live loads, so there is a difference.
BTW I never take safety lightly.
Cat Whisperer, what type of cannon, cast, steel, cast with a steel liner? How old was the gun. What was the charge in the gun? How much and how wet was the paper. How long have the people been shooting it, did they know what they were doing?
I have been in the gun shop and people bring in shotguns that have blown up and say they would never own that brand of gun or be around someone shooting that brand.... When I look at the gun and ask if there was mud in the barrel, they said yes "I dropped it before I shot it"... "but,but,but a gun should never blow up"..... I have seen that many times over the 17 years I have worked at this shop. If I go from what they say..... I would never shoot a shotgun... Sometimes its the people..
Dan, our loads are in foil, and for the most part it is always in the barrel after we shoot.
Maybe we need to just shoot live loads in the dark and all the time we can, it's just a waste of zinc but I like it when a cannon comes running after you and not just sitting and never move. I love recoil, that's why I shot about 10,000 rounds in my black powder guns last year, most in 58 cal but a lot of 44 cal, 54 cal and 69 cal smoothie, all with 50 to 80 gr of Goex. I put 200 rounds or so in the 12 lb mortar for comps and a few practice...
I have not been a real fan of wet wadding, like you say "to make pressure" the amount of pressure depending on how much wet wadding is used
can create more pressure than is desired stressing your tube
Yes, yes, yes, It can create more pressure then the desired stress or pressure, so can adding to much powder, or a lead ball or zinc......
People need to be smart and know when to stop......under N-SSA rules they have powder and ball rules to keep it safe. I don't load the powder box so I'm not for sure but what I remember and know some other people shoot, a cannon like ours with a zinc ball has a load for the N-SSA of about 4 oz but if we go up north on the 600 yard or more we would be shooting 8 oz or more under NAA rules... I don't see how a few sheets of wet paper could get to that pressure....