I asked John Gallagher (Parrott-Cannon) if he would create some external ballistics data on Seacoast’s 1/6 Scale 7” Treble-Banded Brooke Seacoast and Navy Rifle M1862. He did an absolutely first-class job and gave us more than we asked for. He gave us data on the scale powder charge related to the service charge used for bombardments of the union batteries on Morris Island from Battery Marion on Sullivan’s Island during the Civil War, that of 518 grains which represents the original charge of 16 pounds. Also he calculated what the ballistics data would be for every 5 yards out to the projectile impact of this charge and the maximum, ironclad killing charge of 20 pounds, scale equivalent of 648 grains, more than 224 pages of data. We owe him a lot and when we make another firecracker cannon of any type, he gets one FREE!
Just looking at the brief synopsis of this ballistic data presented here, you can see that these rifled cannon with bore diameters of 1.000” to 1.250” are definitely no toys! Our 1/6 scale Brooke has a bore of 1.167” dia. and is rifled with authentic Brooke hook-slant rifling which is 7 groove, R.H., constant twist rifling which has one turn in 56”.
You can also see from the data that, with a muzzle energy of 16,432 foot pounds, penetration tests on mild steel plates up to and including those 1.00” thick are lots of fun with the Brooke. And, with a mid-range of 2,080 yards, over one mile, the 648 grain load produces a resulting velocity of 558 feet per second which yields 2,742 foot pounds of energy at that distant point. This is enough to send a geyser of dirt 20 feet skyward! Hits are very easy to spot even at these extended ranges. We plan on keeping one of these guns and have hundreds of hours of range tests planned for it.
Tracy and Mike Thank you John; you’re the best!
P.S. We used this formula to calculate Muzzle Energy: ME=(Vel. in f.p.s. Squared) X (Mass in grains avoir) divided by the constant, 450400.
Elevation angles 2 to 45 degrees
Powder charge 648 grains
Projectile weight 9 oz.
Muzzle velocity 1,371 f.p.s.
Muzzle Energy 16,432 foot pounds
2 degrees elevation angle
Time in seconds Range in yards Height in feet Velocity (f.p.s.)
Start 0 0 2.67 1,371
Mid-range 1.2 460 29.42 994
Impact 2.6 882.5 0 851
5 degrees elevation angle
Time secs. Range Height Velocity
Start 0 0 2.66 1,371
Mid-range 2.70 910 139 838
Impact 5.76 1,667 0 671
10 degrees elevation angle
Start 0 0 2.66 1,371
Mid-range 4.8 1,435 451 708
Impact 10.4 2,547 0 506
20 degrees elevation angle
Start 0 0 2.66 1,371
Mid-range 8.2 2,080 1,396 558
Impact 18.3 3,562 0 435
35 degrees elevation angle
Start 0 0 2.66 1,371
Mid-range 12.4 2,470 3,265 421*
Impact 28.0 4,122 0 437*
45 degrees elevation angle
Start 0 0 2.66 1,371
Mid-range 14.6 2,430 4,614 348*
Impact 33.5 4,042 0 460*
Factoids:
* Only at the elevations of 35 and 45 degrees does the velocity diminish to a low point ABOVE the ground and then increase until Impact.
The over-all Maximum range of 4,122 yards was achieved at 35 degrees tube elevation. This was in contrast to 4,042 yards max. at 45 degrees.
Incredibly, 1,667 yards was achieved with only 5 degrees elevation. This is almost one mile.
The highest Mid-range height, 4,614 feet resulted from shooting at 45 degrees. This is just shy of 9/10 of a mile.
At 20 degrees the maximum range is over two miles at 3,562 yards.
With the 648 grain load, the maximum range of our Brooke cannon is 4,122 yards or 2.34 miles. The maximum range of the 13” Seacoast Mortar M1861 was 4,400 yards or 2.5 miles during the Civil War.