zimmerstutzen
70 Cal.
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2009
- Messages
- 5,848
- Reaction score
- 1,215
hunter thompson: I realize that you are trying your best. It appears that you used a breech plug with 5/8 inch threads and then coated over the threads with metal somehow. This may seem like a good idea, but it simply isn't. A welded breech plug depends on the strength of the individual welds, each little bit of weld for each hundredth of an inch. That is a hundred places where the weld might not be that strong, or where a microscopic hole might permit corrosive powder fouling to seep into the joint and undermine it's strength. Even if you are a cracker jack welder, the breeching system is weak. Your threads should be at least 7/8, perhaps 1 inch. and you do not have enough barrel wall thickness for such threads. I once made a cannon barrel from an old piece of heavy walled steam drill pipe. As I recall a very high pressure piece of metal. I cut threads and put in a piece of a bolt as a breech plug. The cannon fired great for few years and then one day, I noticed the wad for over the powder went in the muzzle far easier than it had in the past. It swelled. The exterior showed tiny cracks and was about a 32 nd of an inch wider at the muzzle than at the breech. Another shot or two and it might have proved very bad. Have you checked to see how prone your schedule 40 would be to work hardening? What about the weld material? Can it work harden? As others have said, what you are planning is a very suspect and probably dangerous way to join a breech plug to the barrel. The barrel is not the optimum material. I would pass on this one and get the real barrel and breech plug and do t according to the text books about building and builders.