first of all , if its cast with the lost wax method there is no parting line
this is an extreme gun , the engraving is a bit naive , but very carefully done .
all details are extremely well done , cant be an mass produced decoration piece ,
more likely to be an cannon produced by an highly skilled craftsman .
by commercial reasons or because of an genuine interest we can never tell .
but my guess would be because of an genuine interest for cannons .
when it comes to the material quality I would guess bronze , but its almost impossible to be sure without having it in my hand .
lights and flash can make it look different in the photos , but it seem to be bronze , looks to dark to be brass .
its more red than yellow .
would be very interesting to check it with magnaflux or similar method to see if there is any signs of having the trunnions pressed into the barrel . or at least have the barrel free from the carriage .
if you enlarge the photos extremely much you can see that it doesn't have the perfection that an turned piece would have , at least that's my impression . any other ideas ??
the trunnions looks a bit suspicious for me , or maybe better to say the area between the trunnions and the tube .
I cant say if they are in one piece with the rest of the gun from the photos .
but if its an safe to shoot bronze barrel I would recommend you to use maximum 1,5 gram of ffg black powder .
NEVER USE ANY OTHER POWDER BLACKPOWDER ONLY
blackpowder are classified by granulation size from fg to ffffg
USING FFFFG OR ANY MODERN NITRO CELLULOSA BASED POWDER COULD AND PROBABLY WOULD CHANGE YOUR BEAUTIFUL ANTIQUE GUN TO AN PIPE BOMB .
if you not want to shoot it you still could have it as an extremely beautiful decoration , sometimes the shooting aint the most important.
hehehe , now I probably get banned from this forum