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|  11th April 2016, 10:27 AM | #1 | 
| Member Join Date: Jan 2007 
					Posts: 247
				 |  Cannon Id help 
			
			Hi , I would have more info Abaut This cannon ! It s iron 68 cm lenght with 45 kg weight ! Very heavy ! Any comment in origin and use ? Thanks
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|  11th April 2016, 01:05 PM | #2 | 
| Member Join Date: Aug 2014 Location: Germany 
					Posts: 525
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			Hi, i think, this is a Howitzer and of european origin. It is a weapon between a long canon and a mortar. It seems to be an early iron-Howitzer. Roland | 
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|  11th April 2016, 02:51 PM | #3 | 
| Member Join Date: Jan 2007 
					Posts: 247
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			Hi Roland What period in your opinion ?
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|  12th April 2016, 03:15 AM | #4 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2014 
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|  12th April 2016, 06:16 AM | #5 | 
| Member Join Date: Apr 2014 Location: Louisiana 
					Posts: 363
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			Is the inside of the vent threaded? If so I would second the line throwing gun ID. Also, the trunions appear to be set along the center line of the bore. Most modern cannon, from about c. Mid-18th C. used as weapons had them set lower, almost tangential to the bore. | 
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|  14th April 2016, 08:44 AM | #6 | 
| Member Join Date: Sep 2014 
					Posts: 35
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			The form of the reinforce around the trunnions precludes sighting.  It is clearly an industrial age product, perhaps designed by patternmakers in a foundry but not by gunmakers, and the shapes suggest mid-later nineteenth century. I feel that a line-throwing gun is a very good suggestion. There may be catalogue or other documentary evidence of its original purpose. I too have an unresolved cannon ID of the period: Evans and Lowe Cannon, Dundee | 
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|  15th April 2016, 07:33 PM | #7 | |
| Member Join Date: Apr 2014 
					Posts: 235
				 |   Quote: 
 Most active cannon forum I have found. | |
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|  17th April 2016, 09:07 PM | #8 | 
| Member Join Date: Nov 2008 
					Posts: 334
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			Either a line-throwing or a signal (signal means for most fireworks) cannon, the trunnion arrangement is late, post-industrial revolution era, I guess late 19th century or early 20th.
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