DD I respect your knowledge and expertise in black powder cannons but I have to totally disagree when you compare a seamed pipe to a damascus barrel, their construction are very different. Some Damascus barrels are still being used today, mostly Parkers with black powder. You just have to be careful be it seamless or not.
Iell me how they are different.
I can recall the Hunter safty course I took back in the early 60's in Oregon and they talked about how a damascus twist barrel was made and how the were susceptible to bursting and why---tiny little pockets in the welds that developed rust let go. THe guidance given way back then was to not fire damascus barrels even with black powder.
Later when I went on to College and studied Precison Machine technology-gunsmithing the issue of Damascus steel barrels was discussed. There I learned in more technical terms how strands of different types of steels were twisted and hammer forged around a mandrel to form a barrel. I learned that this manner of welding was less than perfect and often left occlusions in the seams--tiny little pockets--that were suspectible to corrosion and rusting which weakend the welding seam.
Sample of barrels were examined that had burst. Some had burst along the seam and the was no sign of internal corrosion. Some had some very serious and visable pockets. The college had a very lovely damascus twist barrelled shotgun that had been Xrayed and the occlusiions were very visable in the film. But the barrel was intact. Also shown us was the more expensive damascus twist barrel than had been formed around a seamless tube. The inner shot gun barrel was seamless and the outer cover of the barrel was damascus.
When I had my shop I had burst barrels ccome in. Two come to mind. One was a simple burst seam a few inches long. Some time in its recent life the gun had been reblue and you couldn't see the damascus pattern, until I polished it. The other was the classic starburst. Both Guns were old and had been shot for years.
Just becasue you have shot your wonderful old Parker Damascus for years doesn't make it safe. Damsacus barrels by there simple mean of manufacture are inherently weak design. Kinda like the low number Springfields, not all are brtitle, just guess which one isn't.
To carry it over to the electrically welded seamed tube I would characterise that weld as far superior to a damascus weld, and the seamless tube carries the warning.