Lance, the balls weigh 4¾ ounces cast from wheelweights, or 5 ounces cast from pure lead. I use the wheelweights, which are cheaper and easier to get in bulk, and save my pure lead for rifle balls.
DD, your idea sounds good, except that the drill I used to cut the chamber is a foot long and has a Morse taper shank. Not gonna fit in my 3/8" Black & Decker.
Instead, I used this calculator:
VOLUME OF CYLINDER WITH HEMISPHERECalculating the volume in CCs and weighing powder with my Lee Dippers, I concluded that I could not drill the chamber deep enough to get the full 60 grains of Fg at 9/16" diameter without drilling considerably deeper. Too deep to maintain my minimum one caliber between the end of the chamber and the cutout for the trunnion. It would have been close, but close doesn't cut it.
I had originally drawn this mortar with a 5/8" diameter chamber, and already had a drill ground before I changed the plan. I saw that I could open up the chamber to 5/8" diameter and get a capacity of 60 grains by drilling only 1/16" deeper. This left me with my minimum thickness and some to spare.
So that's what I did. The chamber came out beautifully (near pefect hemisphere at bottom), and it holds exactly 60 grains of Fg. Max charge for a 5/8" bore is about 70 grains.
Is 60 grains "right?" I don't know, but I'm more comfortable with the 60 grain chamber than I was with the 40 grain chamber. I looks right and feels right.
And even if it's still too small, this is as big as I'm going. At this point the mortar is still fairly well overbuilt and I want to keep it that way. But I have a feeling that I won't need any more capacity.
Now it's time for bed, uh, I mean it's time to make the bed. The mortar bed, it's time to make the ... Oh, nevermind!
I gotta start gettin' more sleep.