I have some questions about a video I watched on YouTube, maybe some of you gents on here can help me out. The video is titled "Gunner Tanya Shoots the Mortar." The mortar is an original 1819 British 4.5" bronze Coehorn Mortar.
At 3:20 into the video, they show their loading sequence. They don't show the bore getting wormed and sponged however, somewhere in the video the narrator mentions that this is done between every shot and the shots are fired one every 15 minutes.
QUESTIONS:
1st - BP is loaded loose, poured directly into the mortar, no foil bag. Is this a bad idea for this particular piece of artillery/should a foil bag be used?
2nd - They are using 3Fg. For a mortar that size, wouldn't one want to used Cannon or 1Fg or 2Fg as a last resort? (They are lobbing 4.5" candlepin bowling balls)
3rd - They patch the ball with a tee-shirt rag, similar to patching a .490 caliber round ball in a .50 caliber Hawkin rifle. Isn't there supposed to be some windage room between the projectile and the interior wall of the barrel, like 1/40th of the bore diameter or whatever that formula comes out to?
4th - Wouldn't a small over powder wad of cardboard or similar material sufice, if sealing the powder chamber was a concern, without impeading the windage of the projectile? Or should wads be avoided?
5th - They do seal the fuze vent with a thumb but with the fuze already in place before driving the patched ball into place. Wouldn't putting the fuze into the powder charge through the vent after pricking the powder bag be the last step, just before lighing?
6th - They drive the patched ball down the tube with a plastic covered hammer. Shouldn't the ball easily slide into the tube with little to no persuasion? See question 3.
I also have some saftey issues later on in the video (at 5:30) when you can cleary see that someone, although off to the side quite a bit, is in front of the firing line when the mortar goes off.
Thanks for any inputs that I'm sure you all will post.