Referring to which “combination of rifling and bolt was the MOST accurate in all the testing you have done”, Cannon Cocker wrote: “So what is the golden combination that made you look at each other, smile with wide eyes, and silently mouth "holy &^*#"?
That actually has happened to us just twice in the eight and a half years we have been using our rifling machine. The first time in 2005 was after a year of on and off building of our Sine Bar Rifling Machine and development of the Rifling Head, it’s most important component. We selected 1.0000” I.D. / 3.00” O.D. mechanical tubing (DOM) for it’s excellent size consistency from end to end and roundness of the I.D. for our first cannon tube. After ruining the first three attempts at rifling due to flaws in the Rifling Head, we did a whole bunch of hook cutter experiments by holding the cutter in a special Bridgeport Mill fixture with an R8 projection. We held milled sections of the 1026 steel tube in the Kurt vise and ran it by, (under power)with the tool held rigid in the quill. We had Positive Rake angles all the way from 8 degs. down to 1/2 deg. and Negative Rakes from ˝ deg. to 5 degs. 3.5 degrees, positive, seemed to cut the smoothest on the 1026 steel. By contrast, we found that a full 5 degrees positive rake angle worked the best when cutting 4150 Rc 30 ordnance steel.
Finally we took our fourth experimental cannon tube to the range along with solid 12L14 bolts, 1.75” long, 1.0000” Dia. and weighing 6 oz. They had a .020” thk. skirt and a truncated cone ogive. The rifling was 4 groove and only .187” wide and .012” deep with lands a whopping .5984” wide! Believe it or not the 4 grooves were indexed by eye as we had not made our first indexing collar yet. We were so happy to have finally made grooves that seemed to have consistent spirals going down the bore and were not all messed up with chatter marks from machining that we zoomed out to the range (180 miles round trip) with only 10 very carefully made bolts to try on paper and 2 to shoot into a soft dirt bank. We shot the rifling engagement rounds first and when we dug them out, we found that they showed the bolt’s skirt had engaged with every groove.
The 100 yard target looked awfully small and lonely way out there on the very green prairie in June of 2005. We fired 5 shots, carefully cleaning the bore after each one, and then started the long walk to the target. When we finally reached it, we could hardly believe our eyes. I can’t remember what we said, but we did look at each other with amazement and delight. The shot gun type patterns of past sessions had been replaced with a nice, tight 3.25” group and all five had printed holes with nice crisp edges (no more YAW!). The pictures here are from our website, but are necessary to illustrate the story without having disjointed look-ups.
Yes, of course we saved the best for last, any story teller worth a darn would tell you the tale just this way. After the euphoria of success, the Seacoast boys were brought back to earth precipitously when they tried to rifle 4142 Colt Crucible Steel and later 4150 Colt Crucible Ordnance Steel with the same hook cutter and the same rifling head which worked so well with 1026 steel. As we worked on our first seacoast gun, the 100 Pdr. Parrott Seacoast and Navy 6.4” rifle, we also visited commercial rifle makers who made their own barrels from 4140 and 4150 barrel steel. Gathering tips and specific information here and there, we decided to completely rebuild our rifling head and the all important hook cutter. Six months later we had one that worked with the extremely tough and pre-hardened 4142 steel we bought. Long hours of rifling and re-rifling cannon tubes followed. We had at one time eight, $400 tubes in the scrap bin to be drilled and reamed to larger sizes when we made them someday in the distant future.
Instead of a hinged cutter, we now had a floating cutter elevated by an adjustable wedge and held in place by spring pressure from a large coil at the front. With a full 5 degs. of Rake Angle, we were finally ready to rifle cannon tubes just like other cut-rifled modern rifle barrel makers do, but slower due to a manual Rifling Machine. Due to extremely focused attention during the alignment phase of construction, we built a machine as good or a little better than the best Pratt and Whitney sine bar rifling machine out there. We even started to use Swedish Tool Steel , FAGERSTA WKE 45. It remains sharp for more than 1,000 strokes of our rifling machine, enough to do all 7 grooves to .023” deep on our Brooke tube.
Although we came to expect groups in the 2.5” to 3.5” range from the 1/6 scale 100 Pdr. Parrott Seacoast rifle, we saw even greater potential from the 1/6 scale 7” Treble-Banded Brooke rifle. Using an authentically shaped bolt made from 12L14, malleable steel with very close tolerances on critical features, we began to expect sub 3.00” groups for 5 shots at 100 yards. Most hovered in the 2.00” to 2.75” range. Although the development targets and the final test targets are owned by the owners of these cannons, we did save a target backer from the most outstanding group we have shot to date. See photo below:
The following specs are examples of the close tolerances held on the lathe turned ammunition that we make and use. All bolts shall be .003” +/- .0001” less than bore size. That’s right, we only allow.0015” all around windage! Yet those 2.00” long steel slugs slide all the way down a clean bore. Bore straightness is held to .003” per foot, less than .005” over all. Bore size is held to 1.1670” +/- .0002” and the muzzle end can never be larger than the breech end of the rifled section.
The third prototype tube provided startling results one windy day in 2007. Shooting from the top of a knoll 75 yards south of our normal testing position, we could see the end of the almost dead flat valley bottom stretched out ahead of our heavy duty shooting bench to 1,200 yards. The target at 100 yards was actually about 10 feet lower than our cannon muzzle, not enough difference to cause any problems. The wind, however, was from 12 o’clock and between 15 and 20 mph. Fortunately the direction did not change in the 45 minutes it took us to fire the five shots. As we walked down to check the target we had low expectations as we could see only one hole without a spotting scope. Our only spotting scope gave up only 3 months before we shot this group! As we got closer we could see two holes, but where the heck were the others?? Finally at about 40 feet we could see the one hole was a cluster of four shots and the other hole was clearly a flier. See the target stats below:
Target Statistics:
Date……………………………………………………………………………..July 7, 2007
Time……………………………………………………………………9:00 to 9:45 A.M.
Size of 4 –shot cluster measured center to center..........………..1.10”
Size of group with flier measured center to center………………….3.85”
Powder charge wt……………………………………………………….….518 grains
Projectile wt……………………………………………………………………….9.02 oz.
Temp (F)………………………………………………….…………….….70 to 75 degs.
Wind…………………………………………………15 to 20 mph from 12 o’clock
The actual target was retained by the customer.
The photos below help tell how this target was made possible.
This pic shows Brooke triangular or modified hook-slant rifling being cut. This tube is 70% complete.
The dirt bank from which fired projectiles are recovered.
Firing into the soft dirt.
These bolts were recovered after being shot into soft dirt. On the left a Brooke bolt and on the right a 100 Pdr. Parrott, chill nose bolt. Both engaged the rifling very well.
One of the many group development targets, this one shows vertical stringing due to lack of preponderance in the 2
nd prototype. The trunnions were moved .280” forward to place more weight over the elevation screw. The 3rd prototype range testing showed none of this stringing.
Seacoast Artillery’s modification of a Pacific Tool Push reamer. Six brass tubes deliver compressed air and water soluable cutting fluid to the reamer’s leading edge. Swarf is blown out at the tube’s muzzle.
The 4150 steel blank round is held in precise alignment with the gundrill by a high precision roller bearing and a robust, shop-made support clamped to the lathe’s ways.
These One Inchers are NOT TOYS!! Think before you act. Do Not Let ANYONE Hurry You! Be careful. Be Safe. Have fun. The rain came down so the 7” Treble-Banded Brooke Seacoast and Navy Rifle was fired from inside the barn owned by one of Spuddy’s friends near Presque Isle, Maine last fall.
That's it for tonight guys. We have answers; ask your questions!
Mike and Tracy