There is an interesting write up on how a proof test was conducted on the Griffin Ordinance cannon. They loaded successively larger powder charges with more projectiles until they were able to burst the cannon. If I remember correctly, it took seven pounds of powder and 13 balls to make the barrel fail. Now that to me is a proof test. Don't try it at home!
where is the fine line between proof testing and destructive testing.
That final test on the Griffen gun, which was loaded with powder and shot for the entire length of the bore, was intended to burst the gun. Previous attempts to burst it with lesser loads had been unsuccessful.
I don't think that destroying the cannons being proofed was a common practice of the Ordnance Department, it seems like the effort to actually see what a specific cannon could take was reserved for those guns that had exceeded all expectations when they were tested.
Concerning the testing of the "Griffen Gun," the forerunner of the 3-inch ordnance rifle; John Griffen the designer of the gun was present at the tests, and after it had passed the regulation proof firing for iron cannon the gun remained sound, so he was asked if he wanted to continue, and this is when he personally challenged Capt. Alexander Brydie Dyer of the Ordnance Dept. to try and burst the cannon.
The same was basically done to J.A. Dahlgren's designs of his 11-inch and 9-inch shell guns, and Dahlgren himself was also very involved with these trials.
"Design for the 11-inch shell gun was submitted March 24, 1851. By
April 30, Commodore Warrington had approved the building of a model by
Cyrus Alger of the South Boston Foundry. It appears this first gun was
used experimentally for several years and finally burst at the 1959th
round July 18,1855. In addition to shells, the gun had fired 655 solid
shot.
In some respects, the trial 9-inch gun built in 1857 was even more
remarkable. After firing 1,500 rounds of standard 72-pound shell with 10
pounds of powder charge, the gun was successively loaded with shot until
10 shot with a total weight of 903 pounds was reached. With 20 pounds of
charge, the overloaded tube finally burst. The 10 shot had filled the
bore to within 7 3/4 inches of the muzzle."