Eod20, So nice of you to ask that question! That gun has always fascinated me and I made a special trip to an obscure government office in Charleston with Mike to get a rare publication about it, which, if I could find it, I would tell you the title of it. However the most information you can gather comes from CSN Commander Brooke's diary and ordinance notebook which is great grandson reproduced in a book called Ironclads and Big Guns of the Confederacy. After the dolts in Charleston blew the breech off the first 60,000 pound Blakely, they sent a telegram to Brooke in Richmond asking, "What happened?"
Brooke knew exactly what questions to ask as to the loading procedure and gun's construction to deduce precisely what happened and how to prevent it from re-occurring in the future. From the ordinance engineer assigned to do the measurements in Charleston, he found that this unusual gun had a bronze something at the end of the chamber area that resembled a vase. It had a void three times as long as it was in dia. He figured it would be stupid to design a chamber for extra powder that had only a 5 inch thickness of bronze surrounding it. The material that it was designed to hold had to be either marmalade or air. He chose air, which was again, a correct deduction. He theorized it's purpose was that of an air cushion to lessen the powder gas pressure's peak. Again, correct.
Blakely later wrote Commander Brooke that he designed it with this in mind and also that a thin tendrill of a powder bag was to go back for a distance into the air chamber, but he agreed with Brooke's instruction to the Charleston Artillerists, which was to load 40 to 60 pounds of naval gun powder, depending on the range desired, to the base of the powder chamber only, with none in the narrow air chamber.
That's the long and short of it. Only anecdotal stories of the gun's effectiveness exist. They all indicate that accuracy was nothing special, with one observer noting that, " After the huge explosion, a voluminous cloud of smoke issued forth and the 600 pound projectile shaped just like a nail keg was seen to go end over end, across the river and onto the trees. Such a commotion was seen on the opposite shore in the wood that we surmised that 5 or 6 full sized trees might have been cut down."
Tracy and Mike