Text book on the theory of the motion of projectiles, the history, manufacture, and explosive force of gunpowder, the history of small arms, the ... of officers sent to the Schools of Musketry
Book Details
Author(s)Great Britain. War Office
PublisherRareBooksClub.com
ISBN / ASIN1236250397
ISBN-139781236250391
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1863 Excerpt: ...of baryta, chloride of barium having been added to the solution and the preci pitate collected. 4. For charcoal.--After the process for saltpetre, the residue on the blotting paper is dried and weighed; the weight of the sulphur found in the second process, together with the weight of the paper, is deducted, and the remainder is the weight of the charcoal. EXPLOSIVE FORCE. 1. Gunpowder possesses several advantages over 'other explosive compounds, which render it better adapted for fire-arms of every description. 1st, the ingredients, saltpetre, charcoal, and sulphur are easily procured. 2nd, they are comparatively cheap. 3rd, gunpowder, under ordinary circumstances, and with ordinary precautions, is safe in manufacture, store, and in transport; it is also durable. 4th, its combustion is gradual and not instantaneous, as is the combustion of gun cotton and of the fulminates of gold, silver, mercury. 2. The action of the fulminates is so instantaneous, that if used in fire-arms the barrels would burst, and the shot be destroyed without any motion of translation being communicated to it; they give no time for their effect to be distributed over the particles at any great distance before those in the immediate vicinity of the explosion are forced out of the sphere of action of the cohesive force, and consequently rupture must take place. Even if fulminating powders are placed on a plate of metal and exploded, the plate may be perforated. 3. Owing to the gradual nature of the combustion of gunpowder, the force exerted by the gases overcomes the inertia of the projectile when but a small portion of the charge is burnt; consequently, by the time the whole charge is consumed, the projectile has moved some distance down the barrel, and the gases occupy a much larger...

