1. I wonder what antique "weapons" Ebay allows and which they reject? I thought they didn't allow any but this particular seller puts one up every week and it stays there. I wonder if it is because they say they are in the US and the weapon isn't?
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=150165022998&ssPageName=ADME:B:EF:US:11232. Wonder how they get away with posting copyrighted material like this article on the particular mortar, from the Artilleryman?
http://bronzecannon.com/Britishmortar.htm 3. I did some analysis on the mortar shown in the article and I don't think it is authentic. There's no British iron mortar of that shape, nor anything close, in the British manuals. This iron mortar, which they call a 24 pounder, has 2" trunnions. The bronze 24's we have here, from two different coutries, have 2 3/4 inch trunnions. Since cast iron has to be thicker than bronze for the same application, I'd say there's something wrong. Also the 19th C. mortars in this size that I've seen, iron or bronze, always have either a cylindrical or a Gomer chamber, not "hemispherical" as the article shows for the Ebay piece. In addition, the barrel wall thickness appears to be less than that of bronze coehorns of that era. The piece does look like it has some age in the article photos, but it could be a well-weathered 20th C. replica. At best it could be some kind of line-thrower, but it does not have enough meat on it to be a typical tactical Coehorn-type mortar, at least in my opinion.
4. Any thoughts?