Sounds good. And leaves me with questions. Where did you get this info from, got a link? Sounds like some good reading.
In the mid 1860’s the vast majority of the activities of the Ordnance Department of the British Empire were captured on paper. That is to say that an immense amount of information in the form of written descriptions, original drawings, official printed reports, circulars, proformas & tables etc were bound together in the shape of 5 handsome leather covered volumes.
Notes On Small Arms 1866. G.C. Holden, Assistant Superintendent of Stores.
Notes On Laboratory Course Section A. 1865. G.C. Holden, Assistant Superintendent of Stores.
Notes On Laboratory Course Section B.C.D. 1865. G.C. Holden, Assistant Superintendent of Stores.
Notes On Royal Carriage Department. 1866. G.C. Holden, Assistant Superintendent of Stores.
Notes On Ordnance. G.C. Holden, Assistant Superintendent of Stores.
For several years, far more than originally envisaged, we (mainly Dr. C.H. Roads & I) have been working on reproducing these 5 volumes as a limited run. Every page of each volume is professionally scanned in high resolution to be reproduced in colour, opposite it is the same page typed out, because the original style of handwriting (copperplate) is not easy to read. Under the transcript is modern commentary - usually researched to quite some extent. Then the whole has to be set up into a manuscript ready for printing. There are about 4 stages of proof reading. It is many many hundreds of hours of spare time & funding the first volume's print run is causing problems. To say that these volumes contain a wealth of information is a gross understatement.
The quill tube info, detailing how made, what the ignition/burning composition is, how placed, how dried, how finished etc is I believe in either "Notes On Laboratory Course Section A. 1865" or "Notes On Laboratory Course Section B.C.D. 1865".
Adrian