Hello!
I am a knifemaker from NH and I recently decided to fabricate two small black powder cannons. I read some of the safety specs and tried to stay within them as I am a complete beginner in the cannon world. I wanted to show the fruits of my labor and a bit of the process of each and ask what i could/should have done differently. Both cannons function great!
Here are a few pics of my first one, a .30 caliber designed to shoot 5/16" ball bearings.
I began with a pretty solid hunk of steel. Its nothing special as I've found mild steel is more than enough for these based on research. I first cleaned up the block on my Bridgeport mill for squareness and sprayed it with layout fluid. The block began with dimensions around 2.75"X1.5"X1.25":
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/1.jpg)
Next I scribed some lines to keep things relatively straight. I didn't go anal retentive on precision here as this is not as intricate as my folding knives but I am a bit OCD about certain things so its still pretty dead on. I'll be shooting 5/16" ball bearing out of this (slingshot ammo) so I first drilled a starter hole a bit smaller.
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/3.jpg)
Here it is all lined up. What you dont see is i have the block angled about 5-10 degrees so that the fuse burns at an angle towards the front of the bore. I let the fuse hole intersect the bore a few mm from the rear of the chamber:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/4.jpg)
Into my shop I went and bored the hole out to 5/16. A 5/16 ball bearing is exactly .0312 while a 5/16 drill bit is .03125 although without going crazy with tolerances and care it usually leaves a hole a smidge bigger. Here's the full 5/16 bore done:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/5.jpg)
Next I headed over to my little beast of a grinder. It runs a 2"x72" belt off a 2HP motor and hogs steel as well as flesh pretty easily. I've lost more skin to this badboy over the years than I care to mention. I've paid it in blood and its paid me back.
I set the platen to somewhere around 45 degrees although i honestly just eyeballed everything from here out.
Initial bevels ground:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/6.jpg)
Once the bevels were in, i thought to myself "heck i may as well put some sights on this. Obviously i really wont be aiming a smoothbore 2" barrel at much but hey, why not? Good excuse to fire up the mill and make some chips. I viced it up thew in a four flute 1/2" endmill:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/7.jpg)
Here it is after the first pass...mild steel is SO soft compared to the stuff I usually mill.
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/8.jpg)
Here it is after a second pass, leaving a ridge in the back for the sight notch. Looking good as far as I was concerned. I left a nice rough finish as I knew i'd be cleaning it up on the grinder:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/9.jpg)
I put on a 220 belt and did some initial beveling of sharp edges, deburring etc. I also counterbored the bore. First time Ive actually used a counterbore on a bore. Ironic! As you can see, the steel heated a lot during grinding causing some surface rust in the bore. No biggie as I planned to do a final reaming later.
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/10.jpg)
The only part that couldn't be finished by machine was the space between the sights. Ugh...I'm used to hand sanding so out came the block and paper. I've developed a skill at mundane tasks knifemaking so this was easy:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/11.jpg)
Back to the mill to put in the rear notch. 1 minute later. How do people get by without a mill? Ugh i remember the days of hand tools only before I sold enough knives to begin buying tools. Those days sucked:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/12.jpg)
Being an egomaniac, I had to put my name on this thing. I etch my name by electricity. The etcher uses basically a stencil much like a silkscreen stencil, an electrolyte solution and AC/DC current. Here's the stencil in place:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/13.jpg)
And etched. I didnt go too deep as it eats up the stencils and I save that for stuff I sell. You'd still need to grind this off to remove it. Now when this thing gets registered as a WMD, they'll know who made it:
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/14.jpg)
And finally, a few shots in my hand. What a cool little project. I had fun, learned a bit and have a new toy to play with.
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/18.jpg)
![](http://www.schottknives.com/guns/bpcannon/19.jpg)