While my first golf ball mortar isn't a bomb waiting to happen, I have been interested in making a new one. My first mortar's powder chamber is a piece of 1.75" diameter 1018 sledgehammered into a 5.5" section of DOM tubing with .75" thick walls. At the time I didn't have a lathe and that was the best I could do. Now that I'm getting a little better at machining stuff I thought I'd make a better mortar that actually looks like a historical model.
When I first got my lathe I had grand ideas about making a 13" long golf ball howitzer based off of
one of CU_Cannon's plans. I bought some 4" 1018 and started working on the cascabel, but the project was a little over my skill level and possibly my lathe's capacity. This hunk of metal has been sitting under my workbench for 2-3 years and I decided it'd be a good candidate for my 10" seacoast mortar. I'm using
GGaskill's plans which are conveniently scaled to golf ball bore.
I cut off the cascabel and muzzle so I had 7" of material. Obviously what was left of the howitzer's pilot hole will start the bore of the new mortar.
Next I faced off the muzzle so I could measure back to where the diameter changes.
Turning the taper over the bore.
Boring bore boring.
I opened it up to 1.723, so it's right at 1/40th windage.
Drilling a 5/8" powder chamber for a maximum capacity of around 100 grains. I figure that will get me out to 100 yards with steel Fox balls at 45º. I went with 5/8" because from what I've read, I think long narrow powder chambers are a little more reliable and efficient than wider ones.
I don't have a ball turning attachment, so I drew the breech in CAD and then drew a horizontal line every 50 thousandths. Then I could select the next step and see how long the cut should be. Believe it or not, this is the first time I've used the tick marks on my lathe's knobs. I took a "machining" class in college and it was really a lot of fun. I didn't learn much because there were too many students and the teacher was truly incompetent.
However, that class was responsible for making me to get my own lathe to play around with. Anyway, I'm starting to figure out easier ways than stopping the lathe every 30 seconds to measure with calipers.
The stepped off hemisphere.
10 minutes with an angle grinder and files.
Done! Or so I thought. I can't believe I forgot the little "lip" at the start of the breech's taper. I think I was so excited about how well the hemisphere came out that I completely ignored it.
I managed to get the tube back on my lathe relatively straight and deepened the breech's taper to make that lip just behind the cylindrical part. I also bought 75 Fox balls. Man these suckers are no joke! I tossed one up in the air and it came down with a satisfying "THUNK!"
I usually like trying to make everything myself, but cutting the mortar bed out is a bit much. I'm sure I could do it, but instead I drew up some plans and took them to a local metal fabricator and am having him cut them out with a water jet. The main piece is 3/4", while the thinner outside piece is 3/16". I plan to weld the seam and try to blend everything together with a grinder/dremel to make it look like one cast piece. The lifting lug is 1/2" and the inner trunnion supports are 3/8".
That's as far as I've gotten. I'm currently stuck until I get material for the trunnion and the bed pieces are cut out.
Thanks for reading.