Dominick Carpenter's site has changed but he is still making golf ball, billiard ball, and soda can mortars. I haven't talked to him about cannons.
https://blackpowder-cannons.com/Write him at cannonfab@hotmail.com
I bought a soda can mortar from him about a month ago and am having a great time with it.
Last weekend I shot my mortar in a fallow hay field using beer cans I cut to 2.65 inches and filled with Rockite. I won't do that again. Rockite expands.
The cans weighed 6,875 grains (+or- 20 gr). With 175 gr of FFFg they went 350 yards when elevation was set at 45 degrees.
I had an 18 inch length of white cloth attached to a hook I set in the Rockite. It would have been hell trying to find the can in the rolling terrain without it.
I couldn't see the can in flight until the cloth streamer was visible just before it landed in front of the dark trees that were about 50 yards beyond.
Next time I'll be using tennis balls filled with sand with discarding gas checks made from beer cans. The sand is free and so are the cans I find along the road. It's much easier to control the weight using sand. They weigh 2,830 grains. The gas checks weigh 75 grains. I'll start with a load of 100 grains FFFg.
I do it for the exercise as well as having fun with the mortar. Kind of like chasing a ball around a golf course. 350 yards is about as far as I want to walk back and forth between shots over uneven ground. I have bad knees. Five shots would be about two miles.
I started out firing the mortar with cannon fuse but disliked having to run away and then turn around to watch. So I bought an inexpensive wireless 4 cue (4 channels for 4 mortars) fireworks ignition system. I thought I could be well away when I hit the 'fire' button and have a chance at watching the can in flight. Nope. Didn't work. Only saw it a split second before it landed in front of the trees.
When I first got the system I used orange wire eMatches (store bought) in the fuse hole. But I get more DIY satisfaction making nichrome wires that have been coated with a homemade nitrocellulose lacquer mixed with magnesium powder to give it more of a spark.
I think it's safer to use an instantaneous ignition. The situation downrange could change while a regular fuse is burning.
Someday I'll try to chronograph it with a horizontal shot. Just guessing, but I think it's going less than 300 fps. Maybe the tennis balls will be a bit faster.
The design of the mortar is interesting. The barrel of the mortar is 7 inches deep and has a bore of 2⅝ inches. The powder chamber is a 3/4" ID tube that sticks up about 1⅝" from the bottom of the mortar. With the projectile sitting on top of the chamber there is a good burn, gas development, pressure build up, and then the volume of the barrel opens up and the pressure goes way down. (That's basically how shoulder fired grenade launchers have been made since the Vietnam war.) Dominick said he uses much less powder to get better results compared to when he made them without the powder chamber. I use a drop tube to get the black powder in the chamber. It came with the mortar. I haven't packed it down like I do with my 54 cal Lyman Great Plains Rifle. I'll have to get a dowel and try that.