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Various

"Scientific American Supplement, No. 794, March 21, 1891"

The
shock to the explosive is, of course, greater than in the full-sized
projectile, but the increase can be calculated, and so far a dangerous
limit has not been reached. From the fifteen-inch gun with a pressure
of 1,000 pounds per square inch and a velocity of about 800 f.s., a
range of 4,000 yards has been obtained at an elevation of 30 deg. 20, with
a ten-inch subcalibered projectile, about eight calibers long and
weighing 500 pounds. This projectile will contain 220 pounds of
blasting gelatine. With improved full-sized projectiles weighing 1,000
pounds, a range of 2,500 yards will doubtless be obtained.
At elevations below 15 deg. these long projectiles are liable to ricochet,
and what is now wanted is a projectile which will stay under water at
all angles of fall and will run parallel to the surface like a
locomotive torpedo. Such a projectile has yet to be invented; but I
have seen a linked shell, which has been experimented with from a
nine-inch powder gun, that partially meets this condition. It is made
of several sections united by means of rope or electric wire in
lengths of 100 to 150 feet. When fired all sections remain together
for some distance; the rear section then first begins to separate;
then the next, and so on.


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