You cast that? Very nice!I cast a batch of these, remember too much powder and the ball is too hard to track. We would fire out into the ocean but could you imagine going to a golf course with your mortar and a putter
You cast that? Very nice!I cast a batch of these, remember too much powder and the ball is too hard to track. We would fire out into the ocean but could you imagine going to a golf course with your mortar and a putter
Ive cast more impressive bitsYou cast that? Very nice!
Now that is just the right size mortar in my mind to have a lot of low cost fun with limitless projectiles. I really like the streamer idea as well.A friend made this for me many years ago. And, it is also bored for a golf ball. I attach a colored streamer, in this case, an orange strip of cloth via a drywall screw. Using 1F cannon powder, a bare ball gets launched and is found days, weeks, years later in the woods somewhere. But with the streamer, you can usually follow it down. We have a small cedar tree in the middle of the backyard which is next to the woods. Object is to drop the ball into the cedar. Elevation and wind are mainly the controlling factors. I use a 35mm film can for powder measure. It does go boom.
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More practical, yes. But they don’t have anywhere near the power! I really would like a big mortar, but as you said they are a pain to set up. That and the cost is usually prohibitive.Now that is just the right size mortar in my mind to have a lot of low cost fun with limitless projectiles. I really like the streamer idea as well.
My mortar weighs about 250 lbs and shoots bowling balls. I get about 14 shots to the lbs and if I can find the ball I get about four shots before it comes apart mid air from the tremendous shock and pressure of the lift charge. Flight time with a 500 grain charge of canon grade Goex is about 17 seconds and if you have good eyes you can track the ball through the whole flight. A 500 grain lift charge will range about 1/3rd of a mile so it's kind of hard to find enough room to shoot it unless over a lake or the ocean.
Mine is percussion ignition using musket caps and the carriage is a steel sled with 5/8s plate steel base bolted on top of two 3.5 inch x15 x36 inch long glue lam beams. The tube is 27 inches long and is elevated with a jack screw from 17 degrees to vertical.
It's a lot of fun for folks to watch but is a lot of work to load in the truck and then take apart and clean after words. The golf ball mortars are a lot more practical, economical and probably just as much fun to shoot.
Thank you! (death from above).OK, you mortar guys really seem like crazy fun
I started making cannons as a teenager in HS shop class. I drilled a 1 inch bore ,10 inches long in a 2inch diameter piece of cold rolled steel round. I shot spark plugs wrapped in news paper for wadding for a projectile. I had no money for fuse in those days so used cut open shotgun shell powder poured in a line up the barrel. It burns slow enough for you to get clear of the cannon before discharge.We had a small mortar year's ago. To get some noise when shooting a blank, we wadded with green grass,
BTW, fuse firing is not a good idea, as you can't control when it will be going off, should something come up that you do not want to shoot, wanders in front of it. Linstock firing with priming powder in vent hole is also not real reliable. We use a cut down plastic beverage stirrer that will go down the touch hole (the one's from Burger King work good if they still carry them), cut narrow strips of double sided adhesive paper that will fit the hole in the stirrer, put the strip into 4Fg to pick it up. Then put strip in the stirrer so that some of strip sticks out the top end. Fire using a linstock, and matchlock fuse. This works well enough to keep up with CW langured pull fuses.
Something like this is as close to golf as I would ever get! Let’s call it redneck golf, yes we golf with cannons!
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