You are welcome, Paul. The Greenhill formula is an oldie, but a goodie! It saves us a lot of guesswork which wastes time and money.
Will you be able to offer minor turning of the blank's OD, to blend the area left by the 4" long register you machine at the muzzle? I have an idea to maybe use the blank as is.
Yes, we can; email us a sketch. Ah, function over form; we have done this many times and we still have those cannons too. Some are surprisingly accurate!
Tracy
The first production tube we made for the Brooke Seacoast Gun was tested extensively in 2008 and we shot a few 5 shot experimental groups. This one isn't the best we have achieved, but it was very helpful as we adjusted drawing dimensions to improve the function of this cannon. As you can see, we had a problem with vertical stringing on this first target fired at 100 yards. We judged our use of the scope and mount to be error-free, so we looked elsewhere. We had a scale amount of preponderance on this tube/ elevation gear arrangement calculated like this: 1,482 Lbs. (original prep. weight) / 216 (scale factor cubed, 6 x 6 x 6 = 216) = 6.86 Lbs. This seemed a bit light, but we wanted everything to scale so made the trunnion position accordingly. You can see the results of that decision on the target below. We needed to find out what was going on.
With the cannon empty, we went through all the motions of loading, setting the tube position on the elevation screw and removing the scope and what we found was the tube DID NOT reliably go back to the same elevation each time. There was not enough weight on the breech end (preponderance). Recoil DOES NOT translate 6:1 with the original gun either. With these scale guns recoil is violent! However, scale service powder charges are the most accurate, so you must tame recoil by building nearly perfect braking devices and once in a while augmenting these historical brakes (counterhurters) by other means which are completely hidden from view. To correct vertical stringing, we merely changed the drawing and put 12 pounds of preponderance on the tube which weighs 100 Lbs. This fixed the problem and the tube settles nicely now and is repeatable, shrinking the group size to 2.5".
The group, before preponderance changes was 2.75" X 6.0"
Maximum scale powder charges of 648 grains, (original was 20 Lbs.) were used and 1,500 fps was normal for the 9 oz. Brooke expanding skirt bolts giving a muzzle energy of 19,670 ft. lbs. All that energy had a stunning effect on the milk jug in the video below.
Sometimes we get too darn serious! Once in a while we take our 1" cannons out just for fun. Although shown before, this video clip shows what kind of fun you can have with a 1" tube. Yes, the water filled milk jug was sitting on a stack of cow pies at 100 yards.
No, we were NOT aiming at the little bird!
Click on the image.