At work I've been building up a box of scrap brass and last week the boss let me take it home. It's mostly 1/2" brass round bar about 3.5-4 inches long. There's also a few 5/8" pieces. As you can imagine, my mind was racing with possibilities.
I've never really done much with brass in a lathe so I thought I'd make a light Dahlgren boat howitzer because it's about as simple a cannon you can make. On Saturday I did a lot of research and drew up a set of plans. I got the dimensions for the barrel straight from Dahlgren's "
Boat Armament of the US Navy" and I made the boat carriage from a picture. I measured the pixels on the picture, then calculated what the actual dimension would be. It ought to be pretty close. I did modify the chamber from the gomer style to a 1/3 cylindrical style when I built it though.
Next I started turning the barrel. I scaled my drawing down so the 8" breech diameter was .625" and the bore worked out to .36 caliber. Like I said, I've never done much with brass and it seems to be kind of splintery. At least I seemed to get more bits of brass stuck in my fingers than I usually get with steel. I drilled a hole through the wall, threaded it with a 1/4-28 tap and then screwed on a piece for the lug. Next I ran the 23/64" drill bit down the bore again and cut off the excess threads.
I shaped up the lug with a Dremel tool and a cutoff disk. It still needs a bit of work with a file. Then I started working on a boat carriage out of some hickory. I found surprisingly little on the internet about this carriage. Perhaps the best picture I found was from the CSS
Teaser.
And this evening I started working on the lower part and cut the slot in it. After I finish the base up I'll make a brass A frame to hold the barrel and the wing nuts for the compressors.
I haven't drilled the vent yet, and I'm really not sure if I plan to. I don't know what kind of brass it is, but it did seem a bit brittle.