Posted: 4/8/2015 11:53:15 PM EDT
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Just a guess, but.....
http://www.relicman.com/artillery/zLibraryArt.510.Sawyer.html Maybe a lead sabot from a Civil War-era Shenkl shell?
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Looks to me like a hand cast bullet for a cannon.
Probably a home made jobby made with a surplus cannon barrel. A slug like that wouldn't take as much lead as a solid bullet. It would be reasonably accurate as the skirts flair out apon firing. And it would bleed off velocity so as not to fly as far as a solid. But really I'm just curious and don't know anything about it either. |
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Did civil war era rifled guns have that many groves? Soft lead with blunt front seems to suggest early (civil war?) era but fine multi grove rifling would indicate something much later
The flat front raises questions . Were there any rounds made that were multi part stacked with only the front part with a sharp point? The rifling makes it appear it was fired but the front doesn't look hammered ? Not to over think this but is it possible it has some industrial use other than a war munitions? What area did grand pa serve in? |
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Quoted:
Did civil war era rifled guns have that many groves? Soft lead with blunt front seems to suggest early (civil war?) era but fine multi grove rifling would indicate something much later The flat front raises questions . Were there any rounds made that were multi part stacked with only the front part with a sharp point? The rifling makes it appear it was fired but the front doesn't look hammered ? Not to over think this but is it possible it has some industrial use other than a war munitions? What area did grand pa serve in? Im pretty sure the flat part is the back end of a case loaded projectile. |



