Would a helix be required?
I could be wrong, but I'm thinking that they would have wanted the block to be seated at the front in order to eliminate play between the male/female interface. This would most probably involve a helix.
However, if a cartrige case contained the charge, the design wouldn't be much different than a large bolt-action rifle (no helix).
Anyone know how the ammo worked in the Welin?
We think a helix shape in the mating threads would be necessary. There is not a single rotary, bolt-action military rifle without one. The tremendous leverage can overcome a little grit on the cartridge case or a nick in the rim or other anomaly which would prevent the action from closing without that extra crushing power of helical shaped locking lug recesses.
We believe that the large bag guns, like most of the naval artillery using the Welin Breech block with De Bange obturator would need helical threads as well to overcome the firing residue which builds up just ahead of the obturator disk under the mushroom. Without time to clean this critical area during a rapid or sustained fire mission, we believe the seating power of the helix would be required to reliably seat the breech block to it's correct position.
They were lighter, they were quick, they were dependable, but the big disadvantage was their susceptibility to damage and posible jamming during use. One button torn off a uniform during the serving of gun could jam these very precisely machined assemblies. A fumbled wrench could put the breech block out of action with a dented thread. The German naval gun designers were big on reliability. They had sliding breech blocks all the way up to 15" Naval Artillery.
Victor, your method of large dia. thd. spud and mating female thd. ring fixture sounds pretty good, but our automatic quill feed for boring is broken and would have to be fixed or another method of advance used. Yep, the 90 deg. head would be needed. Would the work need to be at 45 deg. to get the 90 deg. included angle thread form?
Subdjoe is right, we always learn something from a new project and you learn more from one that "pushes the envelope". When we built that rifling machine, we were building a fairly basic machine, but we learned so, so much about alignment and grinding that we never had to know before and have used several times since.
As far a doing this, we think 1/4 scale would be a good size, say for an 8" original or maybe a 6" like the British Army Gun, Model 1925, but we have 4 Brookes to build and one big mortar. The rosewood for the 150 Pdr. Armstrong Rifle upper carriage is waiting to be whittled too. Had to go to British Columbia to get it, but it was easier to find than white oak!!
Regards,
Tracy and Mike