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Naval gun rifling cutter photo's

Yeah, very deep. I wonder what the jacketing material was?
Steel. But the rifling never engraves the steel. There are “rotating bands” usually of gilding metal swaged on to the base of the projectile. These don’t rotate, but they cause the projectile to rotate while in the bore. Here is a photo of the ready rack in a battleship turret. The brown band at the base is the rotating band,
 

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Begs the question, bronze or nylon?

OT/ Back in the bad old days, I ran an old WW2 surplus gun lathe. Used it to turn the bearing journals on steel mill rolls. The bed was 20' long, no rapid traverse, engaged the half nut to move it to the end or you'd be cranking that big wheel for a looong time. Man, I'm glad I don't have to do that anymore.
 
There's two spanner nuts showing so I wonder if there was interchangeability built in to the tooling. Also, the window is interesting. I'm guessing it was some sort of indexing mechanism to control the twist rate.
 
Think they sort the bullets ? Obviously I knew they had guns but never sat and looked at the info... amazing stuff , says these were retired in 92... must have been upgraded... that really makes me scratch my noggin...
 
Think they sort the bullets ? Obviously I knew they had guns but never sat and looked at the info... amazing stuff , says these were retired in 92... must have been upgraded... that really makes me scratch my noggin...
Yes. If two sailors could pick it up, it passed. If it took three, they might need to tweak the load with an extra 110 pounds or so.... ;)
 
A friend told me that image was for the 16” naval guns.

I found this interesting, but the chamber pressure numbers are suspect.
18.5 tons x 2000 = 37,000 PSI, not 370,000 PSI. I believe an extra zero was added by mistake.EE8A45DC-C324-4DB4-B23A-8A76C837FAAC.jpeg
 
These Rifle Barrels were also designed to be “relined“ after so many rounds, which I believe were about 350 to 400.
They actually fired a lot more than that. Reclining was a major process, as these were “built-up” guns with many tubes shrunk together to make the reinforcements necessary. The system that made up the tube assembly were liner, tube, jacket, three hoops, two locking rings, tube and liner locking ring, yoke ring and screw box liner. Some of these had interferences that would permanently deform the material to strengthen it call “autofrettage”. It was probably cheaper to just replace the whole tube.
 

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