Can anyone help with images of a suitable U.S. elevating mechanism?
Also the percussion hammer?
The elevating gear will have to be reproduced & there is a good chance that the hammer will be as well if sufficient details are at hand.
Tracy & Mike have you ever come across anything similar to this on a carriage?
We are still in a quandry as to what carriage type to mount it on. There are three probabilities:
1). On one hand a large wheeled field carriage would have limited its use somewhat, their fort's towers are mostly just too small for such a carriage, whereas a garrison carriage could have been suitable for fort defence, naval use & even in a siege role if transported on a regular cart.
Thoughts anyone?
Adrian
Adrian, While we have never seen this exact type of cannon before, the Large Bore, Light Weight and Short Tube indicate it'e closer to a gunnade in these various characteristics, rather than a typical field howitzer. More suited to naval or garrison type carriages, it is, as it's recoil, even with reduced charges, would be fierce and very destructive to any field carriage. We would also believe shells would be the projectile of choice, both for effectiveness and reduced recoil impulse also.
Take a look at these photos below; hopefully they will help you decide which way to go toward a proper carriage.
Regards,
Tracy and Mike
This American Civil War photo features our favorite carriage, the Marsilly, for naval use. A French design, it was copied by the Americans in the 1850s for naval use up to the 100 pdr. Parrott Rifle shown. It's advantages were reduced recoil movement, and speed of maneuver in battle. It can handle recoil much better than any cast iron garrison carriage ever could from all that we have read. Excellent in tighter quarters like fort tower artillery positions or smaller scale battlements.
The elevation screw shown here will work on a garrison, naval or field carriage. Used on a 7" Brooke Rifle on a wood, barbette carriage here, the bottom rounded end rests on a small, simple, iron plate and the top end is about 9" longer, and, of course, included a handle similar to the type used in vises about 1" from the top. Do any of you fellows notice something strange about this tube's mounting?
This is a drawing that we found at Waterveliet Arsenal on the Hudson River in New York State. We looked at about two hundred old drawings on April day in 2004 in the Cast Iron building, now the Museum. This was one of several which they let us copy and take with us.
Used primarily on 9" and 11" Dahlgren Shell Guns, it would be properly used on a tube size similar to your's as well. The only view available is shown in this photo, no top view, unfortunately.