Adrian, thanks for the info. I have a friend in the US who studies British 19th C. rifled artillery, who shares your opinion that this seems to be an unlikely project for Armstrong. He thought Blakely was a possibility, I guess since Blakely did convert a number of older British smoothbores, such as some now in the collection of the Naval Historical Center at the Washington Navy Yard. Still, I need to find other pieces with the same type of shallow 8-groove rifling before I try to make a match. Offhand, I don't know of such a piece attributed to Blakely; if anyone does please let me know.
As far as I can see there are no marks on this that relate to its conversion, but as I recall there is another number underneath near the trunnions which may have some meaning in that context if this type of British 3-pounder doesn't normally have marks in that location.
If you want to look at the marks on the piece, there is an early, kind of low-quality video we did, which shows the marks at about 4 minutes into the video. I mis-identify the MGO as "Cornwallis" when the "C" actually stood for someone else, I think, so straighten us out on that please.
We made another mistake in letting Ed get his face too close to the vent when lighting the fuse-we don't do that anymore.
Regarding the 3-pounder production, I've seen pieces dated as late as 1808. Somewhere we have a shorter 3-pounder bronze gun, British, still smoothbore, which has built-up trunnions. It came from Africa, so perhaps it had to be adapted to a larger carriage at some point. As I recall it has same marks on breech and chase as the gun shown in the video, but different maker.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lhER53Mb_T4