We have been working on getting our rifled liner or sleeve product figured out for about a month now. Not too much time for Petard target building, but we will chip away at that Special Project gradually as we have time. First, to let you know about some changes we have decided on due to many reasons, mainly customer cost. We have always thought that the price point for these 1" bore sleeves should be $399.00, so we have designed them, looked high and low for the best materials and have purchased efficient tooling with meeting this 1" bore rifled sleeve price always in mind. Any less and we would not bother to make them and any more and you rifled cannon hopeful would probably not buy them.
Some of the features these rifled sleeves will have are listed here: First, they will be superbly accurate and will be guaranteed to shoot five, 1.000" Dia. cannon bolts into a tight, 3" group (measured center to center) at 100 yards, if properly installed. They will be fitted with a strong breech plug with an excellent gas- tight seal system and correct internal radii facing the chamber area. Seacoast Artillery will also offer a perfectly smooth, rifling free, chamber area, for no extra charge. This will facilitate thorough cleaning between shots by allowing the sponge to rotate easily and the smooth surface will not have a place to harbor sparks from the previous shot. The 30 inch long tube will be a superior grade, TYPE 6 DOM mechanical tube of .375" to .625" wall thickness with the tightest tolerances on roundness and straightness. The interior will be honed by Seacoast until silky smooth. All in all, these sleeves will allow you not only to have a really cool looking cannon, but will help you shoot some outstanding groups as well. Remember what Col Townsend Whelan once wrote: "Only accurate rifles are interesting!" Our whole business is geared toward making interesting to shoot, rifled cannon!
As for schedule, we will not disappoint you guys by making more predictions. However, with the shop expansion project scrapped and the Krupp #2 project on hold for completion of the 1.0000" and the 1.7500" Bore Dia. rifled sleeves, I don't see why the development, testing and pre-production of the 1.0000" rifled sleeves couldn't be completed by summer's end. The following series of photos will show what we have accomplished recently on this project and what needs to yet be done.
Tracy
We had to make new, smaller tube supports shown here, tiny compared to the huge Brooke Rifled Cannon support in the foreground. Those are hardened steel wear pads JB Welded to the aluminum supports.
A 5/8ths inch thick sleeve ready to be rifled.
Mike machined the indexing collar two days ago. It will stop the tube rotation in one of ten different positions to hold it for groove cutting. 6 robust set screws and locktight hold it on the tube. Older collars for the 9 groove Parrott 100 Pdr. rifling and the 7 groove Brooke 7" Navy and Seacoast Rifle are stacked nearby.
Front view showing the powerfully spring loaded, indexing spud on the left.
The rear view showing how the massive, clamped angle plate holds the tube from sliding back and also allows the rifling head to come partially through the breech end of the tube.
3 weeks ago Mike machined the Rifling Head and several key features on it including the chip recess, the pivot pin hole, the wedge pin hole and the wedge adjuster bolt hole and the pinion gear mounted push/pull tube socket. The hook cutter is not made yet. It's width dimension will allow it to cut authentic James type rifling of 10 grooves for use as a liner in a stand off 1/3 scale 6 Pdr. Bronze Field Gun M1841.
We have ordered a precision ground 72" long, pre-hardened piece of 4142 steel bar, 3/4" X 1/2" for the sine bar which will replace the one shown here which was used in rifling the much shorter 7" Brooke tubes.
A rifled M1841 Bronze Gun. One of the nicest shapes ever created for a cannon tube.
The business end with 10 equal grooves and lands. The grooves are flat cut which gives the James rifling a very noticeable and distinctive look. Most grooves are radiused, and your eye perceives them as normal. The James System is one of the very few with flat or faceted groove bottoms. They look startlingly different and reflect light just as the flat cut facets of a diamond do.