Yup. Unless I'm mistaken, the howitzer is the new Crusader field piece at 155mm. Only has a three man crew and each one has an ammo vehicle following along.
Interesting. Reminds me of a story, not black powder, but if our kind moderator will indulge me...
Back in the 1950's, the above ground testing of nukes was going out of fashion, due to treaty. Sandia Nat'l Lab was given the task to develop underground testing to replace them. In an early shot in 1955, a hole was drilled 1000 ft deep, and a device (10 Kilotons yield, I think) was lowered into it. The hole was capped with a 4 ft wide, 4 inch thick steel cap, weighing about 1000 pounds.
BOOM!
High speed cameras running at the rate of 126,000 frames per second recorded the above-ground scene. One frame, the cover was there, the next, it was gone. It was never found.
Thirty years later, one of the scientists was ordered to find out what had happened to the missing cover. He kind of suspected he knew, so he carried out some calculation.
The half-ton cover had been launched at a velocity of about 40 MILES PER SECOND. Not only had it been launched into space, but it's escape velocity was sufficient to leave the solar system.
Somewhere out there, assuming it hasn't hit something, is a distorted piece of steel, heading for the stars...
Now that's a gun.
From the book: "Backyard Ballistics" as recalled from my feeble mind.
Michbob
PS: This predated Sputnik by two years.