Dominick, that looks like a winner to us and is very similar to the canon we make, but it's actually much closer to the one we saw on our first trip to Fort Pulaski near Savannah, Georgia. It's the most prominent seacoast rifle on the terraplein. We like this cannon a lot because it looks so 'clean'. Not many things sticking out from it! The following pic is a scan from an old chemical photo from 2003 on a hazy day in Georgia.
The 100 Pdr. Parrott Rifle, M1861 on an 1859 Iron, Seacoast, Front-Pintle, Barrbette, Carriage
We like it a lot, Dom, but we have a question for you. Is your tube a 'drilled from solid type" or a Rodman process, "Water Core" type. As you most probably know, Parrott's, West Point Foundry made about half of their 500+ 6.4" Rifles by the Water Core process. Even on their solid cast tubes, they cut the bore, prior to reaming with a long, finely made 'coring' or 'trepanning tool'. It took just 24 hours to get that core out of the tube with that special tool and some special, screw-actuated wedges at the bottom of the bore to break the core piece off. A team of two mules was then hitched to a large screw eye at the core's end and then, "YEE HAAH!!" they pulled it out! The same material removal process on the 6.4" Double-Banded Brooke Rifle took the Confederate foundry workers at the Tredegar Foundry in Richmond, 900 hours to do the very same thing by drilling and drilling bigger and boring and boring bigger and bigger and bigger until it was finally to size except for reaming.
What an ideal Christmas gift for someone special on your list!
Tracy and Mike