First of all Mike and I agree with Little Seacoast and his most recent comment, it is a fine barrel and we want one too. Now, to satisfy the Montana Moderator's insatiable curiosity and to assist a fellow builder, we will post a drawing we purchased near Harper's Ferry, WV that is from one of our country's best archives, the name of which, I don't recall.
So, once again:
Nuances, you say M&T. I think I spot one. The second taper isn't a taper, it's an ogee, isn't it?
No, it's a taper. When counting tapers on a tube or reinforces, always go from breech to muzzle. The second taper is a taper. NOW, if the Montana metal mangler is talking about the general shape of the tube's top dead center
as it goes from the muzzle to the cylinder, then you could loosely define it as an ogee. Yes, I could agree with that.
An ogee is two arcs that curve in opposite directions whose ends are parallel.
The shoulder on a 577/450 case is a ogee. Roy Weatherby used an ogee shoulder on his cartridges. It is more common use in mouldings-woodworking and architecture.
Tracy do you guys have some original drawings of this gun, to check and see if it calls radii?
Here is the drawing Ed is working with
Yes we do Double D, and it differs in some details from the one you fellows have. See it below. To help a fellow builder and the best metal mangler in Montana, maybe second best, that guy who lives 40 miles northeast is a pretty good one too, we have provided this drawing. Note the differences in the muzzle flair and the breech radius, our two areas of concern.
AND, the Swede is correct, it is a large radius between the two tapers, it's about 18 inches according to our calculations, which, for a 1:14 scale gun would be about 1.3", fairly large on a 9" long gun. Thanks, Dan, good observation.
Keep going Ed, you're doing a great job!
Tracy and Mike